White jade three presents
Bai Bi San Xian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B á IB ì s ā nxi à n, which means that the Chu people and his family got Yu Pu, two presented to the king of Chu, two were cut off. For the third time, Wang Shi ruled Pu and got white jade. He thought it was Bi, which was called "he Shi Bi" in the world. It refers to ignorance of good talent or ignorance of talent. From Han Feizi and his family.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: cherish talent but not meet it [antonym]: meet a good talent [rhyme words] adapt to circumstances, seeing is better than hearing, dismissing, listening but not hearing, seeing but not seeing, writing, ink, paper, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink, ink
Idiom usage
The subject predicate type is used as the object and attributive. Example: he Jingming's Tian Zixing: "if the pearls are thrown in secret and the sword is pressed, the white Bi San Xian will be cut off."
The origin of Idioms
See Han Feizi and his family.
Idioms and allusions
During the spring and Autumn period, Bian he, a jeweler of the state of Chu, found a piece of raw jade from the mountain and went to the palace in high spirits to present it to King li of Chu. King li of Chu thought it was a stone, so he ordered someone to cut off his left foot. When he gave it to King Wu of Chu, King Wu of Chu also cut off his right foot. Only King Wen of Chu knew the goods and ordered people to process them into the famous He Shi Bi.
Chinese PinYin : bái bì sān xiàn
White jade three presents
Fire the dragon and cook the Phoenix. pào lóng pēng fèng
Look into the present and know the past. chá jīn zhī gǔ
let the eye travel over the great scenes and let fancy free. yóu mù chěng huái
the heavens split and the earth sinks. tiān bēng dì xiàn
govern by doing nothing that goes against nature. chuí gǒng ér zhì