Guandoushuanglong
Guandoushuanglong is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Gu à nd à ushu à NGL ó ng. From the biography of Zhang Hua in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Zhang Hua in the book of Jin, "Zhang Hua of Jin Dynasty is good at looking at Qi. He often sees purple Qi in the bullfight and orders Lei Huan to visit Fengcheng. Huan went to the county to dig the foundation of the prison house, and got two swords, Longquan and TAIA. Hua and Huan each wore one of them. After Hua died, where he lost his sword. Huan died. Huan Zi was walking through yanpingjin with his sword. The sword suddenly jumped out and fell into the water.
Idiom usage
[example] However, seeing that the two dragons are several feet long, each with its own articles, shining brilliantly and the waves boiling, they lose their swords. "
Chinese PinYin : guàn dòu shuāng lóng
Guandoushuanglong
change existing habits and customs. gé fēng yì sú
seek far and neglect what lies close at hand. shě jìn jí yuǎn
resplendent with variegated coloration. wǔ guāng shí sè