Shame on the queen
Shame on the queen is an idiom, pronounced ch ǐ J ū w á NGH ò u, which refers to being ashamed of being inferior to oneself.
explain
It refers to being ashamed of being behind others in the name of a text.
source
Wang Bo, a biography of literature and art in the new book of the Tang Dynasty: "Bo is as famous as Yang Jiong, Lu Zhaolin and Luo Binwang for his articles. He is known as" Wang, Yang, Lu and Luo "in the world, and is called" four outstanding men ". Jiong tasted and said, "I'm ashamed to be in front of Lu. I'm ashamed to be the queen."
Examples
The spirit of Heyue is a great poet. The spirit of Heyue is so proud that he is a poet. Jinnong's poem "you Wu Ting Shan Cun Chen Wen Zhen Gong Ju Li" in Qing Dynasty and Jinnong's poem "you Wu Ting Shan Cun Chen Wen Zhen Gong Ju Li" in Qing Dynasty
usage
It can be used as predicate, attribute, ambition, etc.
Idiom story
During the Tang Dynasty, most of the literary works were poems. At that time, Wang Bo, Yang Jiong, Lu Zhaolin and Luo Binwang were the most famous in the literary world. They were all known as the "four heroes of the early Tang Dynasty". They were all famous for their poems. People ranked them in the order of "Wang, Yang, Lu and Luo". After knowing this, Yang Jiong said with emotion: "I am ashamed to be in front of Lu, I am ashamed to be the queen."
usage
It can be used as predicate, attribute, ambition, etc
Chinese PinYin : chǐ jū wáng hòu
Shame on the queen
Touch the ground and call the sky. chù dì hào tiān
have a well-deserved reputation. míng bù xū dé
I'm tired of hearing and seeing. yù wén yàn jiàn