sixty years of age
Huajianian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ā Ji ǎ zh ī Ni á n, which means the old man is 60 years old. From the chronicle of Tang poetry.
Notes on Idioms
Huajia: in the old days, tiangan and dizhi were used to coordinate each other. Sixty years is a Huajia, also known as a Jiazi. Flower: describe the name of stem and branch is mixed.
The origin of Idioms
Ji Yougong of the Song Dynasty, Volume 66 of the chronicles of Tang Poetry: "in the Song Dynasty, Li Changji wrote a short song, saying to the wine: '" The sixty flowers in the hand Cuan are like beads. "
Idiom usage
It is formal; it is subject and object; it has commendatory meaning.
Chinese PinYin : huā jiǎ zhī nián
sixty years of age
decision making through operations research. yùn chóu jiàn cè
so busy as to have no time for eating. bù huáng xiá shí
the lowly carry little authority. rén wēi quán qīng
The stars and frost are moving. xīng shuāng lǚ yí
to return a thing intact to its owner. quán bì guī zhào
A word from a gentleman is a whip from a horse. jūn zǐ yī yán,kuài mǎ yī biān
like gathering of birds and fishes. niǎo jí lín cuì
try what you have devised against others. qǐng jūng rù wèng