faraway
Haibei Tiannan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǎ IB ě ITI ā NN á n, which means to describe the distance of thousands of miles. It also describes different regions. It comes from "farewell 46 songs · Luo Zhong meets Han Qizhong Cheng's five slogans of Wu Xing".
H ǎ IB ě ITI ā NN á n) source: Liu Yuxi of Tang Dynasty, 46 farewell poems, five slogans of Wu Xing of Luo Zhong meeting Han Zhong and Qi Zhong Cheng: "in the past years, I had a lot of good spirits, and several times I went back to China.". The north and the south are scattered, and they meet in Luoyang City. " example: ~ each by himself, no fish and no geese. In Song Dynasty, Shi Puji's wudenghuiyuan · wendeyan Zen master FASI, the meaning is close to the ends of the earth, and the opposite meaning is close at hand
Chinese PinYin : hǎi běi tiān nán
faraway
the grass is always greener on the other side. zhè shān wàng zhe nà shān gāo
I don't know how to love you. bù zhī téng yǎng
The people are poor and the country is poor. mín kùn guó pín
green tiles and crimson roofs. zhū lóu bì wǎ