premature death of a virtuous or gifted individual
LAN Kui Yu Zhe, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l á NCU ī y ù zh é, which originally means to die of chastity. Later, he made many laments for the unfortunate death of people. It comes from the new words of the world.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in Shi Shuo Xin Yu · Yu Yu: "Mao Bocheng, who is full of his talent, often says," it's better to be a LAN Rui Yu Zhe than a Xiao Fu AI Rong. "
Idiom usage
Used to mourn the untimely death of a person. Although I am still friends in Kunji, I am really embarrassed. ——Zhang Dai in Ming Dynasty and Liu Zhiji in Tang Dynasty said, "it's better to destroy the jade for orchid than to live forever." Wang Tao's song Yin man Lu Hua Li Gu in Qing Dynasty: "Wu Hu! At the beginning, the orchid destroys the jade, and at the end, the perfect pearl is round. Once you die, you will feel more deeply. " The third part of Cheng Shanzhi's poems in prison with Meng Shuo: "Lan destroys Yu Zhe and talks about Yi who, wandering around and bewildering Yang, and my way is wrong."
Chinese PinYin : lán cuī yù zhé
premature death of a virtuous or gifted individual
linger on with one 's last breath of life. gǒu yán cán xī
rescued from desperate situation. kū shù féng chūn
Ride the wind and make waves. chéng fēng xīng làng
thousands and tens of thousands of. wú qiān wú wàn