1, one in a hundred is an idiom in China, which is pronounced as b m: b m: I l ǐ ti ā o y: meaning to choose this one from a hundred. Describe outstanding talents.
From Cao Qingxue Qin's Dream of Red Mansions 120: "My uncle is a little older, never married, and his figure is one in a hundred."
2. A hundred birds fly at the phoenix is an idiom in China. Its pronunciation is b ǐ ihurú y ǐ, which means that many people say the same thing and have the same views or opinions.
From Wang Fuzhi's Biography of Filial Piety in Qing Dynasty: "If you only learn from the words of Hunan people, the bird's mouth is like this."
After listening to Xiangjiang people, I realized that many people said the same thing.
3. "A hundred shots hit the mark" is an idiom of China, which is pronounced as "bib", meaning you can't make a mistake a hundred times. It shows that you have a high hit rate in archery or shooting, or you are completely confident in doing things.
From Wang Hanchong's Lun Heng Vae: "From the door, listening to the hall, I lost nine in a row, just like spying on the room in the upper hall, I never lost one."
Go to church one grade ahead of time and peek at the room-see the previous grade. There is nothing wrong with a hundred times. It shows that you have a high hit rate in archery or shooting, or you are completely confident in doing things.
4. One hundred is not one, which is an idiom of China. The pronunciation is bii dang y, which means that one hundred is not worth one. It is useless to describe people or things.
From Yue's "Han Moon Hee Land Xia Ji": "The people are far away, the valley is quiet, the sky is high, and the land of crossbows is short."
Fairness is easy to go far, and the mountains and streams in the valley are high and low. The advantage of these bows and arrows should be that there is no shortage of soldiers.
5, one in a hundred, the pronunciation of bǐ iǐ iǐ yǐ is an idiom, which means one in a hundred. Describe the rarity or scarcity of people or things.
Back to 150 from Lvyuan Li's "Qi Lu Deng" in Qing Dynasty: "The words must be correct and the words must be fluent, which is really one in a hundred."