Bo Le Yi Gu
Boleyigu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ō L è y ī g ù, which means to be appreciated. It comes from the second yance of the Warring States period.
The origin of Idioms
It is recorded in the second yance of the Warring States Period: in the Warring States period, the Su Dynasty said Chunyu Kun, saying that people told Bole that officials wanted to sell horses, and that even three days after they were in the market, people should not say anything about him. I wish my son would take care of him, and I would like to pay for the whole dynasty. Bole is the ring and see it, go and care about it, once and horse price ten times.
Idiom usage
To be appreciated by a famous person. The price of Meng Bole was counted, but the flying of the fly was only a few steps, that is to say, the tail of the steed was taken, and the fly was outstanding. Biography of kaixiao in the book of the later Han Dynasty
Idiom story
During the spring and Autumn period, Sun Yang, an expert on horse matching of Duke mu of Qin Dynasty, was especially good at observing and evaluating the quality of horses. People praised him with the name of "Bole", which was in charge of Tianma in myth. The value of any horse he liked immediately increased. Once someone took a horse to the market and no one asked for it for three days. He asked Bole to patronize, and immediately someone bought it at a high price.
Chinese PinYin : bō lè yī gù
Bo Le Yi Gu
coarse clothes and tangled hair. cū fú luàn tóu
take bribes and bend the law. tān zāng huài fǎ
defeat and completely wipe out. cuī xiàn kuò qīng
good fortune , long life , health and peace. fú shòu kāng níng
earthenware broken and ice melted. wǎ jiě bīng pàn
combining emotion with scenery. yù qíng yú jǐng