The dragon and the Phoenix
Banlong Fufeng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ā NL ó NGF ù f è ng, which means to fly with dragon and Phoenix. It comes from the book of song by Liang Shenyue in the Southern Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; refers to flattering others
Analysis of Idioms
Pan Long Fu Feng
The origin of Idioms
Song Shu, written by Liang and Shen Yue in the Southern Dynasty, records No.12 music 4: "playing the zither, playing the zither, entertaining yourself. Lingyun ascends the stage, floating too clear. "The dragon is attached to the Phoenix, and the sun is light."
Idiom explanation
It refers to flying with dragon and Phoenix.
Chinese PinYin : bān lóng fù fèng
The dragon and the Phoenix
thousands and thousands of words. qiān yán wàn yǔ
you can 't teach an old dog new tricks. xiǔ mù nán diāo
light wind and drizzling rain. xié fēng xì yǔ
difficult to keep someone against his will. xīn qù nán liú
we 'll march straight to huanglong and there drink together to our hearts ' content. tòng yǐn huáng lóng