Ming Ke Qiang Yu
Ming Ke Qiang Yu is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is m í NGK ē Qi ā ngy ù, which means that Yu Ke rings and Pei Yu is sonorous. It is a metaphor for dignitaries. It comes from "mianshui Yan Tan Lu · omen".
The origin of Idioms
Wang Bizhi of the Song Dynasty wrote in the record of mianshui Yantan · omen: "seeking for the Lord, worshiping the emperor's son-in-law, being a Duwei, singing a clang jade, forbidding entering and leaving, ranking first in Liangtian, playing with treasures, and being luxurious and rich, it was the first time."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Chinese PinYin : míng kē qiāng yù
Ming Ke Qiang Yu
authorized to open letters and act during another's absence. dài chāi dài xíng
combat the weak with the strong. yǐ duàn tóu luǎn
an army fighting for a just cause has high morale. shī zhí wéi zhuàng
the sweat broke out all over one 's body and trickled down his back. hàn liú jiā zhǒng
change one 's initial ill-humour into a feeling of satisfaction. zhuǎn chēn wéi xǐ