intercede for someone
Pronoun, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à IR é nshu à Xi à ng, meaning to say good things for others. It comes from Xiang Si, a chronicle of Tang poetry by Ji Yougong of Song Dynasty.
explain
Speak up for others
allusion
[source]: Ji Yougong, Song Dynasty, wrote "Xiang Si, a chronicle of Tang Poetry:" I've seen that poetry is very good several times, and the standard of poetry is too high. I don't understand Zang Ren's kindness in my life, and I talk about Xiang Si everywhere. " He always loves ~.
Discrimination of words
Grammar: more formal; as predicate and object; with derogatory meaning synonym instead of saying item antonym blood gushing
Idiom story
During the Tang Dynasty, Xiang Si, a young man in Jiangdong, was not well-known when he took the HKCEE. Others showed Yang Jingzhi his papers. Yang especially likes to write poems, "several times I see that poems are excellent, and the standard is too poetic. I don't understand the kindness of Tibetans in my life, and I like to talk about things everywhere." Before long, he was admitted to Chang'an
Chinese PinYin : dài rén shuō xiàng
intercede for someone
supple twigs and tender leaves. róu zhī nèn yè
an exalted discussion and extensive statement. chóng lùn hóng yì