The Phoenix is separated from the Phoenix
As a Chinese idiom, Lu á NF ē NF è NGL í refers to the separation of husband and wife. It comes from the story of the sword by Li Kaixian of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Tang Dynasty, Fang Qianli's poem "sending concubine Zhao's family" said: "the Phoenix and the Phoenix fly apart, the sea trees fall, and I can't bear to listen to the bell and drum to cross the king's building."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; used of a couple or couple, etc
Examples
Since his separation, the wild geese are broken and the fish are scarce. The 48th story of the sword by Li Kaixian of Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : luán fēn fèng lí
The Phoenix is separated from the Phoenix
usages arise from common practice. xiāng xí chéng fēng