Feng gongyide
Fenggong Yide, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ē NGG ō ngy ì D é, which means great merit and prosperous virtue. The same as "great achievements and great virtues". It comes from the biography of Gongsun in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
Pei Songzhi's annotation of "calling Xianbei and invading the north" in the biography of Gongsun duzhuan in the history of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Zhi, quoted Wang Shen's Wei Shu in Jin Dynasty: "since the early rise of the former Emperor, AI Ji, his majesty, Rong yuan, Lei ye, Feng Gong, Yi De, praise the name, debate the langmiao temple, win the clothes, lift the shoes, recite the plaintext, and think it is eloquent."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: fenggongshuode, fenggongmaode
Chinese PinYin : fēng gōng yì dé
Feng gongyide
full of difficult and unpronounceable words. jié qū dà yá
chase the sun and drive the wind. zhú diàn zhuī fēng
an official according to his talents. yīn rèn shòu guān