Dragon, ghost and snake
Dragon, ghost, snake and God, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ó nggu ǐ sh é n, meaning strange and strange. It comes from Qian Qianyi's biography of poetry anthology of liechao, Mr. Tieya, Yang Weizhen.
The origin of Idioms
Qian Qianyi of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his biography of poems of the dynasties: Mr. Tieya Yang Weizhen: "Zhang Boyu's preface to Yuefu says Lian Fu was also in the middle of the Han and Wei dynasties, and went between Shaoling and Erli. The ancient Yuefu CI has the sound of golden stone. The dragon, ghost, snake and God came out from time to time to dazzle the eyes and ears of the whole life. It's amazing. "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used of strange things
Chinese PinYin : lóng guǐ shé shén
Dragon, ghost and snake
talk till one's tongue and lips are parched. chún jiāo shé bì
a place just big enough to get the knees in. róng xī zhī dì
hit the enemy 's crucial point. è kàng fǔ bèi
painted beams and carved pillars. huà liáng diāo dòng
blindly copying others and making oneself look foolish. dōng jiā xiào pín