Hengyang Yanduan
Hengyang Yanduan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h é ngy á ngy à NDU à n, which means that there is Huiyan peak in the south peak of Hengshan Mountain, and it is said that it is the boundary for geese to come and go. It's a metaphor for not being heard. It comes from "sending Li Shaofu to xiazhong and Wang Shaofu to Changsha".
The origin of Idioms
Gao Shi, Tang Dynasty, wrote a poem to send Li Shaofu to exile Xia and Wang Shaofu to exile Changsha: "the cry of the apes in Wuxia is a few lines of tears, and the return of the geese in Hengyang is a few letters."
Idiom usage
Hengyang Yanduan three thousand Road, Wuxia ape cry twelve peaks. Annam collection · eguan Shuhuai by Chen Yiji in Yuan Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : héng yáng yàn duàn
Hengyang Yanduan
entertain imaginary or groundless fears. qǐ rén yōu tiān
My feet are full and my tongue is full. zú jiǎn shé bì
excelling and deep ---- to be transcendent without trace. chāo chāo xuán zhù
a small vessel is easily filled. xiǎo qì yì yíng
confess to false charges under torture. qū dǎ chéng zhāo