valuable
Tibetan mountain, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C á ngzh ī m í ngsh ā n, which means to hide works in the mountain and pass them on to people with similar interests. Describing a work as highly valuable. From Wei Lue.
Analysis of Idioms
Tibetan famous mountains
The origin of Idioms
Wei Lue, a novel written by Yu Huan in the Three Kingdoms period, said: "although it is not a famous mountain to be hidden, it will be spread to the same people."
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate and refers to works that can be handed down to later generations. In Sima Qian's book of reporting to Ren Shaoqing in the Western Han Dynasty, it is said that "Pucheng wrote this book, collected famous mountains, and passed it on to him. If he was able to communicate with a large city, he would have paid for his former humiliation. Although he was killed, he would not have regretted it." Liu Zhiji of Tang Dynasty: "the ancient history of the state comes from the same family, such as Qiu Ming and Zi Chang of Lu and Han Dynasties, Dong Hu and Nan Shi of Jin and Qi dynasties, and xianneng's immortal speech is a famous mountain in Tibet.". 」
Chinese PinYin : cáng zhī míng shān
valuable
when the earth and heaven get old - a long , long time. tiān huāng dì lǎo