Abundant grass and long forest
The Chinese idiom, f ē NGC ǎ och á NGL í n, means (1) Maocao Gaolin. ② A place of seclusion. From Jin San Da Li Fu Biao.
The origin of Idioms
According to Du Fu's "entering the three great rites and Fu table" in the Tang Dynasty, "I have lived for 40 years with the simple custom of your majesty. It's really from the age of the weak crown that we live in the same group with the milu deer and roam in your Majesty's lush grass and forest. "
Analysis of Idioms
Long forest and abundant grass
Idiom usage
It's a place of seclusion. It's a place of seclusion. It's a place of seclusion. Lu Shanji's answer to Chen Xianwu's book in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : fēng cǎo cháng lín
Abundant grass and long forest
entrust to another 's care the children one is about to leave behind as orphans. xíng gū jì mìng
Change the soup but not the dressing. huàn tāng bù huàn yào
The car and the horse are on the verge of each other. chē mǎ fú còu
ashamed to associate with somebody. xiū yǔ wéi wǔ