Joke Collection Website - Public benefit messages - Is it an idiom to have a head and no tail?

Is it an idiom to have a head and no tail?

There is a beginning without a tail, a Chinese idiom, and the pinyin is yǒu tóu wú wěi, which means there is a beginning without an end. It means not getting things done. Excerpted from Tang Shi Huiran's Quotations from Zen Master Lin Ji Zhao Hui.

The idiom comes from Tang Shi Huiran's quotation to Zen master Lin Ji Zhao Hui: "This man has only a beginning and no end, and he has a beginning and no end." Idiom discrimination synonyms: anticlimactic, antonym has a beginning and no end: idiom usage combination from beginning to end; As predicate, attribute and adverbial; With a derogatory connotation.

Sentence-making: Qiao Luonai suddenly fell into a bottomless memory, intermittent, headless, brainless and illogical, just like being thrown into the sea, it is useless to let it struggle. But I don't want to be a man with a head and a tail. In the evening, LAM Raymond's father and LAM Raymond had a few drinks, and then they started to talk about things without head or tail.

The inexplicable struggle with Tanggula. However, due to the strong randomness, things are always anticlimactic or have no ending. Du Ye doesn't like Chen Yi very much, but he doesn't allow himself to be a mean person with a head and a tail. He would abandon his companion for his own life, which he would never do.

You must plan things well first, and you can't do such a messy thing. Your wife has a head and a tail, and she is easily attracted by what is happening around her and distracted. She is optimistic about the outcome of everything, so she acts rashly and recklessly.

It's interesting that these messages are endless and worthless. Xuan listened to this sentence with a beginning and an end, staring blankly.