Diaohu Jiaoyuan
Diaohu Jiaoyuan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is di ā oh ǔ Ji ā oyu á n, which means that a strong man takes risks. From the dead.
The origin of Idioms
"Corpse": "in the Huangbo said: Yu left hold Taihang of non and right fight carved tiger." He also said: "the state of Ju has a stone and coke field, which is widely searched. It's fifty steps long, and it's near a hundred Ren river. There are those who are brave enough to see Ju Zi, but they are not brave enough. " Later, "Diaohu Jiaoyuan" was used as the saying that the strong men took risks.
Idiom usage
For example, Huang Zongxi's epitaph of Qianqiu Prince's mansion in Qing Dynasty: "Yong has an old age, where people live in benevolence and righteousness. Although rivers and mountains are changed, poems and books are not discarded. Carving a tiger into the plain is no different from the plain. Deep pines and luxuriant cypresses will never wither. "
Chinese PinYin : diāo hǔ jiāo yuán
Diaohu Jiaoyuan
the sight of familiar objects fills one with infinite melancholy. dǔ wù shāng qíng