Dragon head and pig foot
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is l ó ngsh ǒ ush ǐ Z ú. It is said that the interpretation of the meaning of the book is far from the original intention. From Jin Lou Zi · Liyan Xia.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Emperor Liang Yuan '. The most important thing to do is to use a hundred schools of thought, but not to write about classics. The dragon head and the boar's foot are at any time, and the ox head and the horse's leg are strong
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Analysis of Idioms
A bull's head is not a horse's mouth
Chinese PinYin : lóng shǒu shǐ zú
Dragon head and pig foot
A suckling calf is not afraid of a tiger. rǔ dú bù pà hǔ
the greatness of a man lends glory to a place. rén jié dì líng
plan to station troops permanently. zhù shì fǎn gēng
smash one 's iron pots and pans into pieces and sell them as scrapped iron. zá guō mài tiě