Lu Chen Shui Li
Lu Chen Shui Li, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l ù zh é Shu ǐ L ì, which means that the reputation is far-reaching and the four sides are afraid of it. It comes from the biography of ban Biao in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu's biography of ban Biao in the book of the later Han Dynasty in the Eastern Han Dynasty: "since filial piety and martial arts are not taken, filial piety and propaganda are not taken.". It's not like Lu Chen Shui Li is running around and visiting. "
Idiom usage
In the biography of ban Biao in the book of the later Han Dynasty, it is said that "in different areas, the boundary is absolute but not adjacent, and it can't be conquered by filial piety and martial arts, and it can't be conquered by filial piety and propaganda, but Lu Chen, Shuili, runs around and comes to the guests."
Chinese PinYin : lù zhé shuǐ lì
Lu Chen Shui Li
be attacked by the enemy from without and within. biǎo lǐ shòu dí
A thief, a minister and a rebellious son. zéi chén nì zǐ
act on impulse in handling things. yì qì yòng shì
as easily as turning one 's hand over. fǎn shǒu kě dé
collapse at the first encounter. yī chù jí kuì