a person who has superb talent
Nanzhou guanmian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is n á nzh ō ugu ā NMI ǎ n, which means the outstanding talents in the South; refers to the outstanding talents. It comes from the biography of Pang Tong.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Pang Tong in the history of the Three Kingdoms, the emblem is very different. It is said that Tong should be the crown of Nanzhou scholars
Idiom usage
It refers to a person with outstanding talent and knowledge. Example: Nanzhou was crowned by Pang Tong and the leader of Sanhe was Cui Haoxian and Pei Junzhi. Cheng Yunsheng, Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
During the Three Kingdoms period, Pang Tong, the nephew of Pang Degong, a famous scholar in Xiangyang, was very talented. Pang Degong introduced him to his good friend Sima Hui. Sima Hui found that the 18-year-old was omniscient and omniscient, and his views were quite unique and unconventional. He praised him as the first scholar in the south. Pang Tong later became an important counselor of Liu Bei.
Chinese PinYin : nán zhōu guān miǎn
a person who has superb talent
abandon sacrament and wisdom. jué shèng qì zhì
in poetry one gains depth after suffering. qióng ér hòu gōng
besiege a city to annihilate the enemy reinforce. wéi chéng dǎ yuán