orphaned boys and girls under 15 years of age
Liu Chi Zhi Gu, a Chinese idiom, is Li ù ch ǐ zh ī g ū in pinyin, which means no adult orphan. From the Analects of Confucius, Taibo.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] liuchizhituo [rhyme] genggui yells frequently, laughs noisily, spits into beads, wails, hangs a book with ox horn, fleas come into Yanchu, a doctor of national subjugation, a person is blessed, leads a room, pours out of the city, explores beads
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Taibo said, "you can trust a lonely person of six feet, you can send a life of a hundred miles, and you can't seize a festival."
Idiom usage
To be formal; be an object; refer to an orphan without an adult. An example: a piece of soil is not dry, so why? In the Tang Dynasty, Luo Binwang wrote the article on behalf of Li Jingye, which was written by Zheng Xuan of Han Dynasty. In the book of the later Han Dynasty, volume 63, biography of Li Gu, it is said that "today, the emperor is appointed to be an orphan of Liu Chi, and Li's family will survive and perish. 」
Chinese PinYin : liù chǐ zhī gū
orphaned boys and girls under 15 years of age
light wind and drizzling rain. xié fēng xì yǔ
one flaw cannot obscure the splendor of the jade. xiá bù yǎn yú
Jade and stone sink together. yù shí tóng chén