rare treasures
Linjiaofengzui, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l í NJI ǎ of è ngzu ǐ, meaning rare and precious things. It's from ten continents in the sea.
The origin of Idioms
"Ten continents at home": there are many Fenglin on the continent There are also many immortal families. Boil Phoenix beak and Linjiao, and decoct them together to make paste, famous name of longxianjiao, or famous name of lianjinni. "
Idiom usage
Example: in Tang Dynasty, Du Fu's song of meeting Wang Yiyin after his illness: "you can't recognize the rare mouth in the world, but you can see the strange nature of fried rubber."
Idiom story
According to the records of ten continents in the sea written by Dong Fangshuo of Han Dynasty, it is said that there were ten continents in the ancient eight seas, where the gods lived. In the middle of the West Sea is fenglinzhou, where Xianjia cooks the horn and the beak as glue, which can be used to break the string and break the sword. Later, he used "rare and precious things" as a metaphor. Du Fu's "meeting Wang Yi after his illness and drinking as a gift" says: "there are few mouths in the world, so I don't know it. I can see it by myself." Also known as "rare". The fourth chapter of Wu Xi Ji written by Wang Feng in Yuan Dynasty: "Jun Hou Su is a minister with a bone sticking in his bones, and rare and rare hair is a treasure of the world."
Chinese PinYin : lín jiǎo fèng zuǐ
rare treasures
take advantage of one 's position and power. yǐ guān xié shì
a pleasure which would cost one nothing. shī ér bù fèi
arranged in a crisscross pattern. zòng héng jiāo cuò