Jin Guiguo Shi
Jinguiguoshi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NGU ī Gu ó sh ì, which means the outstanding talents of the imperial court. It comes from the Miscellaneous Poems of Jihai.
The origin of Idioms
The 2600 of Gong Zizhen's "Miscellaneous Poems of the reign of Jihai" in the Qing Dynasty: "I'd like to ask for the secret of longevity of the jade body, and I'd like to leave it to the scholars of the golden boudoir."
Idiom usage
Used as a subject or object; used to praise. example golden boudoir know how much, lonely fish dragon river sea autumn. Gao Xu's poem "talking about the sword before the flower inscription"
Chinese PinYin : jīn guī guó shì
Jin Guiguo Shi
living as a recluse in one 's hometown. jiǎo jīn sī dì
each sticks to his own stand. xiāng chí bù xià
man 's will , not heaven , decides. rén dìng shèng tiān
a well-behaved and dignified country girl. lín xià fēng zhì
high-minded and unsociable figures. juàn jiě zhī shì
arranged in a crisscross pattern. zòng héng jiāo cuò