The dragonfly
Longzhuqu is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is l ó ngxi ā nghu ò Q ū, which means to bend and stretch at any time. It comes from Liu xiaobiao.
The origin of Idioms
Liu xiaobiao in Wenxuan: "the sage holds the golden mirror, the wind is strong, the dragon is weak, and the Tao is dirty."
Idiom usage
Example: Li Shanzhu: "Ban Gu's Hanshu · hanpeng says:" the cloud rises and the dragon becomes the king. " The book of changes says, "the inchworm bends in order to stretch." Lu Yanji's note: "the sage holds the way, opens the wind and leaves, ascends like a dragon, bends like an inchworm, and kills at any time."
Chinese PinYin : lóng xiāng huò qū
The dragonfly
know yourself as well as the enemy. zhī jǐ zhī bǐ
Make fun of the wind and the moon. tiáo fēng nòng yuè
six of one and half a dozen of the other. bàn jīn bā miàn
separation between loved ones in life or death. shēng lí sǐ bié