marvelous medicine
Jinjiangyuli, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NJI ā ngy ù L ǐ, which originally refers to fairy medicine, and then refers to fine wine. It comes from baopuzi neipian by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As an object and attribute, it refers to good wine, which is called "Jinjiang Yuli" by Taoists.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: jinjiangyuye
The origin of Idioms
In baopuzi neipian, written by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty, "Zhu Cao grows in famous mountains and rocks. Its juice is like blood. If it is poured with gold and jade, it will be like mud immediately and water after a long time. It's called Jinjiang if it's made of gold. It's called Yuli if it's made of jade. It's immortal if it's made of jade. "
Idiom explanation
Li: sweet wine. Originally refers to the fairy medicine, later refers to the fine wine.
Chinese PinYin : jīn jiāng yù lǐ
marvelous medicine
do things before one is told. xiān yì chéng zhì
love the subjects as if they were his own children. ài mín rú zǐ
the self-conceited troops are destined to fail. jiāo bīng bì bài
smash one 's iron pots and pans into pieces and sell them as scrapped iron. zá guō mài tiě
wait for one 's lover in the night. dài yuè xī xiāng
Cultivate food and accumulate grass. tún liáng jī cǎo