Chu Shui Wu Shan
Chushui Wushan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ǔ Shu ǐ w ú sh ā n, which means water in Chu and mountain in Wu. It refers to the region of Wu and Chu in ancient times. Later, it refers to the middle and lower reaches of the Yangtze River. It comes from Bai Juyi of Tang Dynasty, who wrote a letter to my brother in Xuzhou to send a guest from the south of the Yangtze River to the north.
The origin of Idioms
According to Bai Juyi's "Jiangnan to send northerners because of the letter sent to Xuzhou brother's teeth", it is said that "what do you want from your hometown? The waters of Chu and the mountains of Wu are more than ten thousand li."
Idiom usage
In the south of China, he was proud of the poems of Tang Dynasty and Jin Dynasty. Lu You, Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : chǔ shuǐ wú shān
Chu Shui Wu Shan
commonplace words and deeds. yōng yán yōng xíng
beat gongs and shout at passengers to open the way for a coming official. kāi luó hè dào
out at heels and elbows -- tattered dress. zhǒng jué zhǒu jiàn