the voice of singing reverberates round the beams of a house for days
Singing around Liang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ē sh ē NgR à Oli á ng, which means that the song revolves between Liang buildings for a long time; it describes the beautiful singing. From Liezi Tang Wen.
The origin of Idioms
In the book Liezi Tangwen written by Zheng lieyukou in the Warring States period, it is said that "in the past, when Han e was in the east of Qi Dynasty, he used to use Kuiyang and pass through yongmen, and he used to sing songs and eat fake food. The source was gone, but the Afterword was lingering around Liangwu for three days."
Word usage
It is used as object and attribute to describe the beautiful singing. In Dongming Ji: "you hear the Queen Mother's song, but you don't see its shape. The song goes around the beam three times, but you go up to the side beam."
Chinese PinYin : gē shēng rào liáng
the voice of singing reverberates round the beams of a house for days
tigers among a flock of sheep. hǔ dàng yáng qún