Take part in the ceremony
Shenchenmaoyou is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is sh ē NCH é nm ǎ oy ǒ u, meaning Shen, Chen and two star names. When Shenxing comes from the west, when Chenxing comes from the East. To participate in Chen, Mao and you are opposite, so they are used as metaphors to show that they are not related or irreconcilable. From Chen Mu Jiao Zi.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Guan Hanqing's the second fold of Chen Mu Jiao Zi: "I look at the pearly gold and silver, and I can be as if I were in the prime of the day."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to opposition. Holding the gold medal and hanging the purple ribbon, one case is just the opposite, no matter, only hope to be rich enough to go to Yangzhou. (Qing Dynasty · Xi Qiu Lu Sheng's reform dream · indignation) Yuan Dynasty · Wang Shifu's the fourth book of the romance of the Western chamber, the first fold: "if you don't fight with Zhang Jieyuan to participate in Mao you, you're making a fool of Cui Xiangguo." Xu fuzuo's "the story of red pears - touyong" in Ming Dynasty: "originally, it was the weaver girl who led the ox, but who expected it to be shenchenmaoyou."
Chinese PinYin : shēn chén mǎo yǒu
Take part in the ceremony
sometimes hot and sometimes cold. hū lěng hū rè
seek common ground while reserving differences. qiú tóng cún yì
beg about the streets by playing an instrument. wú shì zhī xiāo