Dead fish and sick crane
Dead fish and sick crane, a Chinese idiom, pronounced K ū y ú B ì NGH è, refers to a person who is in a difficult situation and is not met. It's from Qun Yin Lei Xuan, jade hairpin, bizheng Tougu.
Idiom explanation
Explanation: dry fish, sick crane.
Idioms and allusions
Source: Ming Dynasty Hu Wenhuan's "Qun Yin Lei Xuan · jade hairpin Ji · bizheng Tougu": "like dead fish and sick crane, dead fish and sick crane, empty Xiaohan, next to hanjimaodian."
Discrimination of words
Idiom structure: combination generation time: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : kū yú bìng hè
Dead fish and sick crane
a dog trying to catch mice -- too meddlesome. gǒu zhuī hào zǐ
be present in person on the grand occasion. gōng féng qí shèng
The people are harmed by justice. cán mín hài lǐ
add radiance and beauty to each other. jiāo xiāng huī yìng