Auspicious
Ji guangpianqiu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j í Gu à ngpi à nqi ú, meaning the remains of precious cultural relics. It comes from Ni Gu Lu by Chen Jiru of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As object, attributive and clause, it refers to the remains of precious cultural relics
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Ji guangpianyu
The origin of Idioms
Volume I of Ni Gu Lu written by Chen Jiru in Ming Dynasty: "there are more than song Zhong Wenshu Zi Ang's LAN Ting Ba, which has all kinds of styles, but only nine paragraphs, which is also auspicious."
Idiom explanation
It refers to the remains of precious cultural relics. The same as "Ji Guang Pian Yu".
Chinese PinYin : jí guāng piàn qiú
Auspicious
expect the reality to correspond to the name. lǎn míng zé shí
God knows it, but man. shén ér míng zhī,cún hū qí rén
Riding the dragon and playing the Phoenix. qí lóng nòng fèng