fertile soil
Gaoyudi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā oy ú zh ī D ì, which means fertile land or fertile area. It comes from Guo Qin Lun.
The origin of Idioms
Jia Yi of Han Dynasty wrote in the treatise on passing the Qin Dynasty that "when we cut off the high land in the East, we think Guilin and Xiangjun."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: fertile soil antonym: barren land, barren land
Idiom usage
As an object; of fertile land. Example: the water towns in the south of the Yangtze River have been rich since ancient times, but now they are more prosperous. In the Han Dynasty, Qin CE San, the Warring States policy, said: "can Qin and Wu balance Han and Wei with Qi County, and divide the city into two parts, so as to enrich Zheng?" "Next year, the Han Dynasty will establish the crown prince. He is the most intimate and meritorious person in the back Liang Dynasty, and he is a great power, occupying a high position in the world. " In the Jin Dynasty, the king of Ming Dynasty wrote in the record of Liao affairs in the three dynasties, Yuan Keli's report on the affairs of Liu AI TA: "bingkou first loved the affairs inside the pagoda, Han sent 30000 foreign soldiers, surrounded the restoration state, bound the pagoda, and went to the restoration state residents. Those who can't be exterminated will go north and drive all the men and women from Yongning and Gaizhou to the north. Once the slaves of 400 Li in Nanwei are abandoned, "he said
Chinese PinYin : gāo yú zhī dì
fertile soil
with grey eyebrows and hoary hair. chóu méi hào fā
change existing habits and customs. biàn fēng yì sú
be busy enough with one 's own affairs. zì gù bù xiá
strict and fair in meting out rewards and punishments. shǎng fá xìn míng
become destitute and homeless. liú luò shī suǒ