Pinkish bamboo
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t á ns ī P ǐ nzh ú, which means playing musical instruments, familiar with music. It comes from Zhang Xie Zhuangyuan and Yuhuan Ji · gaoye Yanshang.
The origin of Idioms
Song Wumingshi's "Zhang Xie number one scholar" begins: "but we, though we are of official origin, are all good at it. It can chant the moon and mock the wind. " Yang rousheng, Ming Dynasty, wrote in the story of Yuhuan, gaoye Yanshang: "I'm known as a pinball and a plump and a floating melon. I'm here to pursue the appreciation."
Idiom usage
It refers to music. The rich prepared good food and wine, and swam around with prostitutes until the moon fell on the western mountain. The fourth chapter of "Phoenix pool" by Liu Zhang in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : tán sī pǐn zhú
Pinkish bamboo
come one after another in succession. suí zhǒng ér zhì
wear the shoes on the head and the cap on the feet. guān lǚ dào zhì
able only to see the little patch of sky above. jǐng dǐ míng wā
to be said of greatness of maternal love. cùn cǎo chūn huī