carriage drawn by four horses
Jiesilianqi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji é s ì Li á NJ ì, which means to describe extravagance. It comes from biography of Zhongni's disciples in historical records.
Analysis of Idioms
Jiesi Lieqi
The origin of Idioms
"Shiji Zhongni disciple biography:" Zi Gong Xiangwei, but Jiesi Lianqi, Pai Lihuo, entered poor Yan, passed Xie Yuanxian
Idiom usage
It is used as an object and attributive to describe extravagance. In the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Chang Yu wrote "records of Huayang state · Shu annals"; therefore, industry and Commerce sent him to jiesilianqi, the rich people dressed in the beautiful clothes of the king and Marquis, married and set up a lot of kitchen food, and returned to his daughter with a hundred taels of slave cars. When he was buried, he would be buried in a tile coffin, sacrificed to dimang sheep and pigs, and gave him a gift at the same time. The origin of this is that it was dyed in the Qin Dynasty, so it's the same. " "Today is the prime minister, tomorrow is the first day to eat," said Li Zhi in his collection of Chutan, husband and wife
Chinese PinYin : jié sì lián qí
carriage drawn by four horses
hardship of travel without shelter. cān fēng yàn lù
heaven is high but listen to the lowliest. tiān gāo tīng xià
the river and the great sky are of the same hue. jiāng tiān yī sè