far surpassing one 's fellows
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ā OSH ì Ju é L ú n, which means beyond the world and peers. From the stele of Chen Shi by Cai Yong of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Cai Yong's stele of Chen Shi in the Han Dynasty: "all the officials raised their hands and said," Mr. Chen of Yingchuan is peerless. "
Idiom usage
It refers to people. Liu Qi's guiqian Zhi, Vol. 12: "a man who has never been strong and unyielding, and who has never been changed in the face of adversity, is a fresh pass."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] superclass, anecdote group and superclass and [antonym] mediocrity
Chinese PinYin : chāo shì jué lún
far surpassing one 's fellows
a situation of tripartite confrontation. sān fēn dǐng lì
a great man becomes famous late in life. dà qì wǎn chéng
Look before and ignore after. gù qián bù gù hòu