Huanggong Jiulong
Huanggong Jiulong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu á NGG ō ngji ǔ L ú, which means people mourn their old friends when they see the scenery. It comes from a new account of the world, mourning the past, written by Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wang junchong, a minister, wore a public uniform, took a bus, and passed the Yellow River. Gu said: "today, although this is near, it's like mountains and rivers." Liu Yiqing's a new account of the world
Idiom story
In the Western Jin Dynasty, one of the Seven Sages in the bamboo grove, the book of history ordered Wang Rong to wear luxurious clothes and drive past the famous Huanggong Jiulong at that time. This was the place where he and Ji Kang and Ruan Ji used to drink. He could not help but feel very sad and said to the guests behind him: "Ji Kang died young, Ruan Ji died. I was entangled in worldly affairs and could not drink together any more."
Analysis of Idioms
[rhyme words] two footed wild fox, follow each other to become a common custom, startle the foolish and frighten the common, have a good army and sufficient food, have practical and complicated people, have a strong sense of seclusion, admire and follow the common customs, be familiar with things easily, write a lot of articles, and have a good command of things
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to the place where friends get together. Yuan Dai Biaoyuan's collection of Shanyuan: after the volume of Xiao Zixi's Poems
Chinese PinYin : huáng gōng jiǔ lú
Huanggong Jiulong
Change one's name into another. dùn míng gǎi zuò
roll up one 's sleeves and raise one 's fists to fight. xuān quán luǒ xiù
clasp an enemy to one 's bosom. rèn dí zuò fù