Chengjiang Rulian
Chengjiang Rulian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch é ngji à NgR ú Li à n, which means a bird's-eye view of the river. It comes from Xie Tiao of Jin Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Xie Tiao of Jin Dynasty wrote in his book "climbing the three mountains in the evening and looking at the capital city": "the afterglow is scattered into splendor, and the Chengjiang river is as pure as practice."
Idiom usage
Xuanhui should like to see the poet. Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty: he weipan's master berthing at the bottom of Chizhou City on the night of July 12
Chinese PinYin : chéng jiāng rú liàn
Chengjiang Rulian
as soon as the sun reaches the meridian it declines. rì zhōng zé zè
Green in the evening and red in the morning. mù cuì cháo hóng
Cutting the East and the West. dōng kǎn xī zhuó
sip wine slowly and hum a tune. qiǎn zhēn dī chàng
the six great divisions in the wheel of karma. liù qù lún huí