highlight dragon's shame
Kang long has regrets, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k à NGL ó ngy à Uhu à, which means that people in high positions should guard against arrogance, otherwise they will fail and regret. Later, it also describes that people who are proud of themselves will inevitably bring disaster. It comes from Qian in the book of changes.
The origin of Idioms
Qian in the book of changes: "on the ninth day of the reign of heaven, the dragon has regrets."
Idiom usage
The subject predicate type is used as the object and attributive. It has a derogatory meaning. If you advance, you will live in the court. If you retreat, you will live in the court. A biography of Wang Bao in the book of Jin
Idioms and allusions
[source] Qian in the book of changes: "in the ninth day of the book of changes, the dragon has regrets." It means that if the Dragon flies too high, it will suffer disaster. People in high positions should guard against arrogance, otherwise they will fail and regret. Later, he also described the arrogant as a disaster. It also refers to the type (the first form) in the eighteen palms of dragon subduing. It comes from the biography of archery heroes and the eight parts of the Heavenly Dragon. Qian Gua's position has reached the Ninth level. In terms of Liu's position, it has reached the extreme. There is no higher position to occupy. It is like a dragon rising by the clouds. It has risen to the highest and most extreme place. Looking around, it is at a loss. It can neither advance nor descend. Therefore, it has melancholy and regret. In physics, this phenomenon will have the effect that things will go against the extreme. As far as personnel are concerned, there will be a phenomenon of extreme joy begets sorrow. Therefore, this idiom also refers to the failure, tragedy or disaster caused by people doing anything without careful consideration of the final outcome and consequences, as well as various possibilities and changes.
Chinese PinYin : kàng lóng yǒu huǐ
highlight dragon's shame
hide one 's capacities and hide one 's time. tāo shén huì jì
rely on one 's position to treat others with contumely and injustice. yǐ shì líng rén
play favouritism and commit irregularities. xùn sī wǔ bì