Jingsheng porpoise
Jingsheng fugu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ǐ ngsh ē NGT ú nqu ǎ n, modestly called his children. From Wu Li.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attributive; used in self modesty. There are still many people waiting to be pregnant when they are born. Although they are all Jing Sheng's porpoises, they can comfort Sangyu and do not worry about the poor people! Li Yu in Qing Dynasty: leisure and occasional mail, CI and Qu, structure
The origin of Idioms
Give birth to a son like sun Zhongmou, Liu Jingsheng, a son like a porpoise dog! Wu Li
Idiom story
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Cao Cao led his army to attack the eastern Wu Dynasty. Sun Quan led 70000 troops to fight against him. When Cao Cao was defeated, he stationed troops in Jiangbei instead of fighting. Sun Quan took a boat to spy on the military situation. Seeing Sun Quan's strict military discipline, Cao Cao said with emotion: "a son should be like sun Zhongmou. Liu Biao's son is just like a pig and dog." After a month of confrontation, Cao Cao withdrew his troops and returned to the north.
Chinese PinYin : jǐng shēng tún quǎn
Jingsheng porpoise
be courteous to the wise and condescending to scholars. qiān gōng xià shì
heart startled and gallbladder broken -- extremely frightened. jīng xīn dào dǎn
How can you make a difference. dān dòu jiàn sè
Hunting in the East and fishing in the West. dōng liè xī yú
be in the van of one 's officers and men. gōng xiān shì zú
his hands respond with delicacy to whatever the mind directs. xīn shǒu xiāng yìng
soldiers and horses are in great haste -- busily engaged in warfare. róng mǎ kǒng zǒng