Biān pì rù lǐ (鞭辟入里) is a Chinese idiom that describes the practicality of doing learning.
Whip Pi Jin Li is a Chinese idiom, pinyin is biān pì rù lǐ, which describes doing study practically. Nowadays, it is often used to describe a thorough explanation of a problem, hitting the nail on the head. From Sheng Xuanhuai's "On the Book of Zhang Xiangshuai": "Nephew, as a trustee, is duty-bound to be a thorough businessman, to create a factory for the world."
Proximate synonym for whip into the wood: into the wood.
Explanation: according to legend, Wang Xizhi wrote on a wooden board, and when the carpenter carved it, he found that the handwriting penetrated into the board three minutes deep. It describes that the calligraphy is very powerful, and now it is often compared with analyzing problems very y.
Chinese idioms and sentences1, Guo Jia summarized to the crowd, from the beginning to the end, Guo Jia is relying on that little possibility, the analysis of the whip into the heart.
2, its for the text as if the sky wave, a diarrhea of a thousand miles, digging into the matter, whipped into the mile; picking treacherous hair ambush, straight to reveal its hidden; record the achievements of the past, chiseled evidence.
3.? Jiang Fan is very knowledgeable, analyze the problem into a whiplash, mention of the opinion into the feelings and reason, so that he was pleased to convince him, he sincerely exclaimed: Jiang, with you a talk, is better than ten years of reading.
4, as if a text is flashing with golden light, each word is not superfluous, whip into the heart! Subtly began to temper his breath.
5, young man ah, you do not need to be complacent, for the technique of this painting you do analyze whiplash, but the essence of this painting does not lie in the technique, but in the spirit.