stand head and shoulders above others
He Xingji Qun, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h è x í NGJ ī Q ú n, which means that a person's appearance or ability stands out in a group of people around him. It comes from Ci Yun Zi Zhan Gan Jiu Jian Ji by Su Zhe of Song Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It refers to a person's appearance or ability that stands out in a group of people around him. The same as "stand out from the crowd".
The origin of Idioms
Su Zhe's Ci Yun Zi Zhan Gan Jiu Jian Ji of the Song Dynasty: "you are the most talented, and you are among the best."
Idiom usage
As object, attribute, adverbial; point out the crowd.
Examples
Song louyao's poem entitled "the painting of Zhao Zun's road in wowa" said: "the middle name is the breeder's crane, which is no longer thin, but black and dusk pecking."
Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty wrote: "Ji Heyuan is not right, Xun long is not boasting."
Liu Changqing of the Tang Dynasty wrote a poem to send a master from other places: "the solitary cloud will lead a wild crane to live in the world."
In Tang Dynasty, Wei Yingwu wrote a poem to the king: "the heart is as far away as the wild crane and the dust, and the poem is like a curling pot."
Song louyao's poem entitled "the painting of Zhao Zun's road in wowa" said: "the middle name is the breeder's crane, which is no longer thin, but black and dusk pecking."
Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty wrote: "Ji Heyuan is not right, Xun long is not boasting."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: stand out from the crowd
Chinese PinYin : hè xíng jī qún
stand head and shoulders above others
If two people are of one mind, their interests will be broken. èr rén tóng xīn,qí lì duàn jīn
No matter how solid the root is, it will hurt. zài shí zhī gēn bì shāng
What one hears is false, but what one sees is true. ěr wén shì xū,yǎn guān wéi shí
govern by doing nothing that goes against nature. wú wéi ér zhì
a single thread can 't make a cord. dān sī bù xiàn