an unnoticed talent
Pearl of the sea, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ā NGH ǎ iy í zh ū, which means that the Pearl in the sea is missed by the pearl picker. It refers to the talent that is buried or buried. It comes from the biography of Di Renjie in the book of the new Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Di Renjie in the book of the new Tang Dynasty, "Zhong Ni is known as the sage of the past, and you can be called the Pearl of the sea."
Idiom usage
Yuan Haowen's Ji Da Fei Qing: "a new poem, a line of writing, is happy to get a pearl from the sea." Lang Ying of the Ming Dynasty's "seven revisions of manuscripts · dialectics 5 · gegu Yaolun should be further examined": "[kugu Yaolun]" the examination seems to have been extensive, and occasionally reviewed, there is no sigh of the vicissitudes of life. " Feng Ziyou's revolutionary comrades in the period of xingzhonghui: "the coefficient of the revolutionary comrades in the first half of the period of xingzhonghui is from the winter of Jiawu to the autumn of gengzi. Although there is a lot of humiliation during this period, the difference is not far." AI Wu's a silhouette in the 1930s: "I send a novel to the novel monthly edited by Zheng Zhenduo But the novel monthly is useless. It only uses the printed rejection letter and the manuscript to send it back together, which means "the Pearl of the sea." Tang Dufu's poem "sending Su Huan to serve the emperor in the late autumn" reads: "Ying takes the Pearl of the sea, and comes to the heart, relying on Kunshan jade." Song Su Zhe "eat chicken head" poem: "chew and collect on the pool water, Xu Yan also become a sea pearl."
Chinese PinYin : cāng hǎi yí zhū
an unnoticed talent
A rotten talent makes a dirty job. cái xiǔ xíng huì
a symbol of war in ancient china. jīn gē tiě jiǎ
believing in and admiring the ancients. xìn ér hào gǔ
a mad dog barking at the sun -- in the futility. kuáng quǎn fèi rì