a gathering of dignitaries
Guangaixiangwang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu à ng à IXI à NGW à ng, which means that the government's envoys or officials keep coming and going. It comes from the fourth Wei ce of the Warring States period.
Idiom explanation
Crown cover: refers to the crown clothes and car covers of renhuan, used as a substitute for officials; Xiangwang: visible to each other.
The origin of Idioms
"Wei CE 4" in the Warring States strategy: "Qi and Chu wanted to attack Wei, Wei sent people to ask for help from Qin, but Qin could not save them."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: crown and cover belong to each other
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type: used as a predicate to describe the incessant exchange of government envoys or officials. example to urge the prime minister, waiting for the merit to be granted to the emperor. Han Yu's poem "sutongguan shangdutong Xianggong" and "Shiji Xiaowen Benji" said: "therefore, I sent envoys to cover each other and tell you the truth, so as to tell me the meaning of Shan Yu." Chao CuO's treatise on Su Shu in Han Dynasty: "because of his wealth, he is a king of Communications When you travel a thousand miles, you can see each other Guo Moruo's speech at the Conference Celebrating the first anniversary of the founding of the Republic of Iraq: "during this period, the envoys of the two countries were all over each other, and the travelers and businessmen were constantly on the way." The preface of Dai Mingshi in the Qing Dynasty: "since its beginning, there have been dozens of generations, and their descendants have been in great numbers. Shaoxing takes the surname of Zhang as the first. "
Chinese PinYin : guān gài xiāng wàng
a gathering of dignitaries
as though heaven and earth had fallen. tiān bēng dì chè
drown one's sorrows in wine. jiè jiǔ jiāo chóu
Three under five divided by two. sān xià wǔ chú èr