Ride the Phoenix
Chengluan kuafeng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch é nglu á Nku à f è ng, which means to form a beautiful couple. It comes from shenluanjiao debt bait.
Analysis of Idioms
"Chengluan" matches "phoenix"
The origin of Idioms
In the book Shen Luan Jiao, debt bait written by Li Yu in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "if you only leave Yi's trace, you are not afraid that things will become empty. You are ready to take advantage of the Luan and cross the Phoenix."
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. They really have a chance to cross the Phoenix. In the second chapter of rebirth fate: "it's hard to compare the woman in Jiangmen. If there's a gualuan crossing Fengyuan."
Idioms and allusions
Xiao Shi, who was born in the time of Duke mu of Qin Dynasty, was good at playing the flute and could bring peacocks and cranes to court. Mu Gonggong's female character is jade, OK. The Duke then took his wife Yan as his wife, who lived for several years with jade as the sound of a Phoenix. The Phoenix came to stop his house. The Duke made Fengtai. It will be no less than a few years before my husband returns to the top. Once they all fly away with the Phoenix. Therefore, the people of the Qin Dynasty kept it as a Phoenix Temple in Yong, and there was only the sound of Xiao in the palace.
Chinese PinYin : chéng luán kuà fèng
Ride the Phoenix
do or think the same without prior consulation. bù qī ér tóng
these were very valuable things in history. jiǔ dǐng dà lǚ
Moisten the house and the body. rùn wū rùn shēn
good men destroyed with the bad. lán ài tóng fén