Farewell to the crane
Biehe guluan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is bi é h è g ū Lu á n, which means a farewell crane and a lonely Luan; it refers to a couple far away. From Qin Fu.
Idiom explanation
Farewell: farewell; Luan: birds like Phoenix.
The origin of Idioms
"Wang Zhao, concubine Chu, farewell to the crane for thousands of miles" is written in Qin Fu by Wei Jikang of the Three Kingdoms
Analysis of Idioms
Biehe liluan
Idiom usage
It refers to the separated couple. Example Tao Qian's poem "imitating the ancients" in Jin Dynasty: "the first string frightens away the crane, and the second string frightens the lonely Luan.
Chinese PinYin : bié hè gū luán
Farewell to the crane
to pull together in times of trouble. tóng zhōu gòng jì
There is nothing to be blamed for. wú yǐ sè zé