birds and animals
Birds and beasts, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē IQ í NZ ǒ ush ò u, which means flying birds and running beasts. Birds and mammals. It comes from the ode to the hall of Lu Lingguang by Wang Yanshou of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Wang Yanshou's Ode to lulingguang palace of Han Dynasty, "birds and animals are born of wood."
Idiom explanation
Bird: bird; beast: beast. Flying birds, running beasts. Birds and mammals.
Idiom usage
Qu Qiubai's Luantan: the "destruction" of Manchuria: "these hunting dogs and hunters compete with each other for hunting enclosure, for" birds and animals. "
Chinese PinYin : fēi qín zǒu shòu
birds and animals