emperor
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is d à w á ngji à ngxi à ng, which means emperors, princes, officials and generals. It comes from Chen she's family in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
In the Western Han Dynasty, Sima Qian's historical records, Chen she's aristocratic family: "if a strong man doesn't die, he will be famous. If he dies, he will have a seed."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Wang Hou Jiang Xiang antonym: common people
Idiom usage
As the subject or object, it refers to the upper rulers in feudal times. Although they are the so-called "official histories" that are equivalent to writing genealogies for emperors and generals, their brilliance can not be concealed. Has the Chinese lost their confidence
Chinese PinYin : dì wáng jiòn xiàng
emperor
a door-hinge is never worm-eaten. hù shū bù xiǔ
sometimes hot and sometimes cold. hū lěng hū rè
To attack the heart and say nothing. gōng xīn è kēng
unjust cause finds scant support. shī dào guǎ zhù
Nine twists of the sheep's intestines. yáng cháng jiǔ qǔ
If one does not press the crowd, one hundred will not follow one. yī bù yā zhòng,bǎi bù suí yī
accumulate bit makes too remarkable. jī wēi chéng zhù