Gold and jade
Keng Jin Jia Yu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ē NGJ ī NJI á y ù, which means that the syllables of adjectives are sonorous and powerful. It comes from the book shadow written by Zhou Lianggong in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: the gold and the jade
[Pinyin]: K ē NGJ ī NJI á y ù
Explanation: the syllables of adjectives are sonorous and powerful.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: the first volume of Book Shadow written by Zhou Lianggong in the Qing Dynasty: "when I first changed, I got up alone and left and right in the north. I have made great achievements in the field of CI until now."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: kjjy
Keng Jinfei Yu
Degree of common use: rare
Emotional color: commendatory words
Grammatical usage: as predicate, attribute; refers to the text, etc
Idiom structure: United
Time of emergence: Modern Times
Chinese PinYin : kēng jīn jiá yù
Gold and jade
strike first to gain the initiative. xiān fā zhì rén
cannot bear to part from each other. nán fēn nán shě
crawl between another 's legs -- to drain the cup of humiliation. kuà xià zhī rǔ
people 's feelings change with the circumstances. qíng suí shì qiān
seek far and neglect what lies close at hand. shě jìn qiú yuǎn
Respect oneself and humble others. zūn jǐ bēi rén