Taken out of context is an idiom of China, pronounced du à n zhā ng q ǔ y, which means to take the meaning of a paragraph or sentence in isolation regardless of the content of the whole article or conversation, and the quotation is inconsistent with the original intention. Cut off and intercept; Chapter by chapter.
Usage: linkage type; As object, attribute and adverbial; With a derogatory connotation.
Idiom: benevolence and righteousness, ingratitude, poverty, gold powder, rain clouds, three emperors and five emperors, to turn the tide, a blessing in disguise, how to know what is not a blessing, stretched and indifferent.
Extended data;
The idiom "taken out of context" refers to taking the meaning of a paragraph or sentence in isolation regardless of the content of the whole article or conversation, which means that the quoted words are inconsistent with the original intention.
The original meaning refers to only intercepting a poem in a chapter of the Book of Songs to express one's point of view, regardless of the original intention of the quoted poem or the content of the whole article or conversation, and taking the meaning of a paragraph or sentence in isolation. The guideline is inconsistent with the original intention. Later, when quoting other people's articles and remarks, I only took the part that was consistent with my own point of view.
Baidu Encyclopedia-Out of context