Kawakami Yueshi
Chuanfu Yueshi, a Chinese idiom, is a Chinese phonetic word, Chu āī NT ī ngyu è zh ì, which means that the water stops flowing and the mountain stands high; it refers to the solemnity of people. It comes from the book of Jin: preface to the biography of hermit.
Notes on Idioms
Chuan, originally known as "Yuan", was changed to avoid Li Yuan, the emperor of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Preface to the book of Jin: hermit biography:" Yuhui, Bingjie, Chuanjian, Yuezhi, xiuzhiyue, solid and boundless rest
Idiom usage
It is often used in figurative sentences. In addition, in the heyday of his studies, CHUANSHI and Yueshi, people's expectations are not small compared with what they say. Preface to meiliusi's poems by Qian Qianyi in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : chuān tīng yuè zhì
Kawakami Yueshi
A bandit who takes advantage of food. jī liáng jiè kòu
there is internal strife afoot. xìn fā xiāo qiáng
drive the fish into deep waters. wèi yuān qū yú
spread rumours to create trouble. zào yáo shēng shì
the language fails to express the meaning. cí bù dá yì