Pinyin: ǔ j ǔ q ǔ
Explanation: throw: throw with something; Avoid: fear, have concerns. I want to hit the mouse with something, but I am afraid of breaking the nearby utensils. Metaphor has scruples about doing things and dares not let go.
Source: Biography of Han Jia Yi: "There is a proverb that says,' You want to get the mouse and avoid the device', which is also a good Oracle Bone Inscriptions."
For example, make a sentence: throw rats to prevent Baoyu from hiding stolen goods and sentence the prisoner to exercise his rights. ★ Cao Qingxue Qin's "Dream of Red Mansions" Back to Sixty-one
Pinyin code: tsjq
Synonym: timid, looking ahead and looking back.
Antonym: fearless and unscrupulous.
Usage: as predicate and adverbial; It means thinking about one thing and dealing with it well.
English: throwing things at mice, but afraid of breaking vases.