Lu Jinyan
Lu Jinyan cut, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ǔ J ī NY à nxu, which means that the quality of Lu's knife and song's axe is very good. If it is produced in another place, it will not be good if it is made in Lu and cut in Yan. It comes from the record of Yangzhou Huafang and Hongqiao by Li Dou in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Qing Dynasty, Li Dou's record of Yangzhou Huafang · Hongqiao (Part 2): his Beijing rudder, qizidiao, Matou Diao, and Nanjing Diao, etc. were passed down from all over the world, but they also worked from time to time. Lu jinyance, however, couldn't be good if he moved to another place
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Examples
The preface to KAOGONGJI of Zhouli: "the Dao of Zheng, the Jin of song, the cutting of Lu, the sword of Wu and Yue moved to the place where they could be good, and the local atmosphere was also good." Wang Yinglin of the Song Dynasty wrote in Zhouli, a chronicle of trapped learning: "in ancient times, there was no pen, so it was called cutting when writing with a knife. Lu is the country of poetry and calligraphy, so KAOGONGJI takes Lu's cutting as good. " Qian Qianyi of the Qing Dynasty wrote "Li Zhimao, magistrate of Taikang County, Kaifeng Prefecture, Henan Province, confers wenlinlang system": "Song Jin and Lu Che moved to their places, and Fu Neng was good."
Chinese PinYin : lǔ jīn yàn xuē
Lu Jinyan
In the world of rivers and lakes, my heart hangs in Wei que. shēn zài jiāng hú,xīn xuán wèi què
enlighten education is crucial. méng yǐ yǎng zhèng
the dear one is gone and the chamber remains deserted. rén qù lóu kōng
look after the suffering of the people. guān xīn mín mò
the six great divisions in the wheel of karma. liù qù lún huí