one 's love for scholars is equal to one 's thirst for water
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is à IC á IRU à K à, which means that loving talents is like thirsty for water. It describes cherishing talents. It comes from the original poem waipianshang.
Idiom explanation
Talent: talent, talent.
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as predicate, attribute; with commendatory meaning, describes the great care of talent. They found that beauty is not a whore because she is thirsty for talent, but only for money. In Lu Xun's a glimpse of Shanghai Literature and art, some kings are eager for talents, but they often can't use them at present. This is ye gonghao long.
Idiom story
Ye Xie's "the first chapter of the original poem" said: "if you take one of the chapters of Han Yu as an example, you can see his bones everywhere and look down on everything; if you advance, you can't tolerate the court; if you retreat, you won't be good at being wild alone, and you are very sick and thirsty for talent. This is the face of Han Yu. Taking Su Shi as an example, we can see that he is flying like a horse in the sky, playing like a flying immortal, elegant and elegant. He is not allowed to enter. He likes to be kind but happy. He laughs and scolds, and he has four seasons of temperament: This is Su Shi's face. "
Chinese PinYin : ài cái ruò kě
one 's love for scholars is equal to one 's thirst for water
coarse clothes and simple fare. bù yī lì shí
be beautiful enough to feast the eyes. xiù sè kě cān