Song of ox horn
Song of the ox horn, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ni ú Ji ǎ ozh ī g ē, which means that later it was an allusion of poor people seeking to use the world. It comes from Lu Shi Chun Qiu Ju Nan.
The origin of Idioms
"Lu's spring and Autumn Annals, Ju Nan": the song of bucking ox horn. Hearing this, Duke Huan praised him as an "extraordinary man", and after his life, he took the car and worshipped him as a superior minister.
Idiom usage
Examples
The song of the husband's ox horn is vulgar but clumsy; the words of the court are not written in biographies. Han Yu's the book of Li Shilang of shangbingbu
Idiom story
In the spring and Autumn period, Hanshi Ningqi was very poor and longed to see Duke Huan of Qi and worship for official posts. One day, Duke Huan of Qi went out of the city to meet his guests. Ning Qi took the opportunity to feed the cattle under the car and beat the horns of the cattle to sing his own voice. Upon hearing this, Duke Huan of Qi praised him as an "extraordinary person" and worshipped him as the prime minister. Ning Qi made a great contribution to the success of Duke Huan of Qi.
Chinese PinYin : niú jiǎo zhī gē
Song of ox horn
a cup of water and a grain of millet-eatvery little. bēi shuǐ lì sù