Golden pot ink
Golden pot ink, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NH ú m ò zh ī, which means extremely precious and rare calligraphy and painting supplies. It's from the book of collection, King Zhou Ling.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Jia of Jin Dynasty wrote in the book of picking up relics king of Zhou Ling: "the two people who presented Tongshan calligraphy to the state of floating mention are old and young, invisible and invisible. They are four inches out of the golden pot between the elbows. There are five dragons on the pot, sealed with green mud, ink in the pot, such as pure lacquer, sprinkling ground and stone, all of which are the characters of Zhuan and kedou."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : jīn hú mò zhī
Golden pot ink
rush on like a swarm of hornets. fēng yōng ér shàng
To communicate in a subtle way. tōng yōu dòng wēi
travel day and night with all possible speed. zhòu yè jiān xíng
would cut clean through iron as though it were mud. xuē tiě rú ní
Three fold humerus is a good doctor. sān zhé gōng,wéi liáng yī
it is advancing sometimes to seem retreating. jìn dào ruò quán