Fei Wen ran Han
Feiwen ranhan is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is f ē IW é NR ǎ NH à n, which means to direct writing. It comes from the biography of Lu Cheng in the history of the Old Five Dynasties.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Cheng's biography in the history of the Old Five Dynasties, the book of the Tang Dynasty, says: "the name of a scholar is a person who is able to serve as a scholar, who is able to help the country, who is able to learn from others, and who is able to stay in office."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate and object; it can be used in writing; it can be used as an example; it can be used in writing; it can be used in writing; it can be used in writing. Preface to Wen Xuan by Liang Xiaotong in the Southern Dynasties
Chinese PinYin : fēi wén rǎn hàn
Fei Wen ran Han
be fond of the new and tired of the old. xǐ xīn yàn jiù
A lot of gratitude and resentment. ēn shèn yuàn shēng
this election campaign has seen all the usual mud-slinging we have come to expect . / there has been a lot of political mudslinging in the battle for votes. è yì zhòng shāng
share the feelings and sentiments. hū xī xiāng tōng