Thick accumulation and thin hair is an idiom in China, and the pinyin is hü u j and bó f ā. Accumulation refers to a large amount of sufficient savings; Thin and scary. Accumulate a lot of money, describing that only by making full preparations can we do a good job. Su Shi's title comes from Su Shi's famous saying about reading and writing: "Learn from others and make great contributions." According to the author's understanding, "about taking" here means not only taking less, but also taking it carefully and taking its essence to get rid of its dross.
Extended data:
A truly knowledgeable person is one who has accumulated the essence of knowledge. People of insight in ancient and modern academic circles attach great importance to learning from others. See it has a choice, take it has a choice, aim at it, just take it.
In the Tang Dynasty, Han Yu criticized some people for reading and writing in the original way, saying that they were "selective but not precise and vague". Wang Anshi advocated that reading should be "carefully thought and carefully read". Yuan Mei, who was good at reading in Qing Dynasty, explained Du Fu's poem "Reading is like a book, writing is like a god" in Poems with the Garden. He said: "cover up its volume, take its spirit, and don't use its dross ... reading is like eating, people who eat well will grow up, and people who don't eat well will have phlegm tumors."
Baidu encyclopedia-thick accumulation and thin hair