The head is the Tao, an idiom in China, originally a Buddhist language, which refers to the ubiquitous Tao. Later, it was described as very organized in speaking and doing things, which came from "Continued Lights, Master Huili Dongyuan". Never forget to describe in mind, never forget, from the Analects of Confucius.
Haggle over every ounce means to care too much about unimportant things. This sentence comes from The Book of Songs, Zhou Songzhi Jing. Prosperity first originated from Tao Jin Yuanming's Gui Xi Ci. Prosperity refers to the appearance of lush vegetation and vitality, which is later used to describe the scene of vigorous development and prosperity of the cause.
Idiom characteristics
Structural fixity: the components and structural forms of idioms are fixed, and it is generally impossible to change or increase or decrease morphemes at will. For example, cold lips and cold teeth cannot be changed into cold lips and cold teeth, and no ink in the chest cannot be increased to no ink in the chest. In addition, the word order in idioms is fixed and cannot be changed at will. For example, context cannot be changed into context and contribution cannot be changed into contribution.
Sacredness of meaning: the meaning of idioms is holistic, and its meaning is often not the simple sum of the meanings of its components, but the overall meaning further summarized on the basis of the meanings of its components. On the surface, it means to bully others by taking advantage of others.