The Phoenix sighs at the tiger
Feng sighs and Hu sees, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f è NGT à NH à sh à, which means elegant conversation and elegant bearing. It comes from Wen Xuan Cao Zhi and Wu Ji Chong Shu.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: "Wenxuan · Cao Zhi's" book with Wu Ji Chongshu ":" the foot of the eagle raises its body, the Phoenix sighs and the tiger looks at it, which means that Xiao Cao is not enough for a couple, and Wei Huo is not enough for MOU. " Li Shanzhu: "phoenix is used to describe literature, tiger is used to describe martial arts. Sighing is like singing. Take the meaning of beauty and strength. "
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as predicate and attribute; used of human temperament
Chinese PinYin : fèng tàn hǔ shì
The Phoenix sighs at the tiger
be a trend which cannot be halted. shì bù kě dǎng
The apes cry and the cranes complain. yuán tí hè yuàn
squander inherited property and ruin the family. dàng chǎn qīng jiā