invaluable advice
Striking jade and striking gold, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī y ù Qi ā OJ ī n, which means the sound of striking jade. It is correct to describe the sound of words. It comes from the mystery of the cave by Yang Shen of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in figurative sentences
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Ming Dynasty Yang Shen's Dongtian Xuanji: "brother, I don't know what the master said. Every word is firm, and words strike jade and gold."
Idiom explanation
Such as the sound made by the impact of gold and jade. The description is sonorous and correct.
Chinese PinYin : jī yù qiāo jīn
invaluable advice
On the top and on the bottom. zhōu shàng yì xià
A bird knows a swan's ambition. yàn què ān zhī hóng hú zhì
a book which is poorly written and not worth reading. zāi lí huò zǎo
a man is not a stalk of grass or a tree. rén fēi tǔ mù