Startle Liang Chen
Startling Liang Chen is a Chinese idiom with the pronunciation of J ī ngq ǐ Li á ngch é n, which describes the wonderful and moving singing. Source: Volume 572 of Taiping Yulan quoted another record by Liu Xiang of the Han Dynasty: "since the rise of the Han Dynasty, Yu Gong, a good singer of Lu, has voiced clear sorrow and covered the dust of Liang Dynasty."
Idioms and allusions
"Since the rise of the Han Dynasty, Yu Gong, a good singer of Lu Dynasty, has voiced clear sorrow and covered the dust of Liang Dynasty." Examples: Song Dynasty Zhao Yuanfu's poem "a gift to a Geisha from a partridge in the sky" reads: "the golden beads burst out in the sound of music, startling the dust of the Liang and falling down on the dancing curtain."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of sounds, etc.
Chinese PinYin : jīng qǐ liáng chén
Startle Liang Chen
cut the bones between the joints and make use of the momentum to decompose the boneless parts. pī xì dǎo yín