outstanding talents
Kunshan jade, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ū NSH ā nzh ī y ù, which means Kunlun Mountain Jade, refers to outstanding talents. From Shangshu Qinshihuang.
Notes on Idioms
Kunshan: Kunlun mountain.
The origin of Idioms
In his letter to the first emperor of Qin, Qin Lisi said, "Your Majesty's gift to the jade of Kunshan mountain is an easy-going treasure."
Idiom usage
As an object; used in figurative sentences.
Examples
"Book of history. Yinzheng": the fire is burning in gugang (the ridge is called the ridge, and the jade comes out of Gushan), and the jade and stone are burning (the fire is said to escape and harm the jade). The officials of the king of heaven, who are evil, do more harm to the world than fire does to jade.
In the preface to Mr. Guo bizhai's 60th birthday written by Zeng Guofan in the Qing Dynasty, "the jade of Kunshan mountain and the big wood of Denglin are not without wood."
Lu Buwei of the Qin Dynasty wrote in his book the spring and Autumn Annals of the Lu family, mengchunji, Chongji: "people don't love Kunshan jade and Jianghan pearl, but love cangbi Xiaoji, one of their own, which is beneficial."
Chinese PinYin : kūn shān zhī yù
outstanding talents
estimate one 's own moral and material strength. duó dé liàng lì
a good omen for military operations. bái yú dēng zhōu