Li Huan Ming Suo
Li rein Ming Suo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ì Ji ā NGM í ngsu ǒ, which means that name and Li bind people like rein and chain. From the book with friends.
Notes on Idioms
Reins: reins. Lock: chain.
The origin of Idioms
"Don't lock up the name of Chen net and smile happily," said Dong Fangshuo of Han Dynasty
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it is used to compare fame and wealth. example song · Liu Yong's "Xia Yunfeng" CI: "to this free rein, waste time." He is greedy, and his youth is swift as an arrow. Wang Zhe, Yuan Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : lì jiāng míng suǒ
Li Huan Ming Suo
exchange solemn vows and pledges. hǎi yuē shān méng
extort excessive taxes and levies. héng fù bào liǎn
have no one to depend on to fall back on. wú yī wú kào
The monk can't run away from the temple. pǎo le hé shàng pǎo bù le sì