Every grain is fierce
Li mi Lang Li, a Chinese idiom, is pronounced L ì m ǐ L á NGL ì, which means that the grain is scattered all over the ground, and it describes that the grain is full. It comes from Mencius, Teng Wengong, written by Mencius Ke in the pre Qin period.
Interpretation of Idioms
The wolf is fierce, that is, the "mess". It's a messy look. The grain was scattered all over the floor. It's full of food. (commendatory words)
The origin of Idioms
Mencius Teng Wengong Shang, written by Mencius Ke in pre Qin Dynasty, said: "happy year, grain and rice are fierce."
Idiom usage
I want to see you again this year. Continued Zizhi Tongjian · eight years of Qiandao of song Xiaozong
Chinese PinYin : lì mǐ láng lì
Every grain is fierce
have succeeded in carrying out an assignment. bù rǔ shǐ mìng