To meet with guests
As a Chinese word, the Pinyin is j à Li ú Qi à K è, which means a person who is highly refined and widely known.
The origin of Idioms
In the book Shaoshi Shanfang bicong · Jingji Huitong 4 written by Hu Yinglin of Ming Dynasty, it is said that "it's just like a strange person who talks with others, who leads the difference and pulls out the new, and there's a series that people haven't seen."
Idiom usage
As an object; of a learned person
Chinese PinYin : jī liú qià kè
To meet with guests
drift about without any definite trace like running water or duckweed. làng jì fú zōng
tremble with fear on hearing of. wén fēng pò dǎn