close fraternal tie
Lianzhidaiye, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li á nzh à D à iy è, which means the branches and leaves of the same root. It often refers to the close relationship between brothers. It comes from Yongning Temple in Luoyang.
The origin of Idioms
Yang xuanzhi of the Northern Wei Dynasty wrote in Yongning Temple, a record of Jialan in Luoyang: "my brothers are not far away from the Qing Dynasty, and they are closely related to each other."
Idiom usage
The third part of Ming Wu Ming's hidden show in Longmen: "who wants my sister-in-law to be vicious and evil? I don't want to share the same root and tie the branches and leaves and rob me out like a beggar."
Chinese PinYin : lián zhī dài yè
close fraternal tie
strategically located places. bǎi èr shān chuān
parallel construction of pairs of four - and six-character sentences. pián sì lì liù
to do good and dissuade him from doing evil. quàn shàn jiè è