Pan wenyuezhi
Pan wenlezhi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ā NW é NL è zh ǐ, which means the diction and intention of a beautiful article. It comes from the book of Jin, Yue Guang Zhuan.
Idiom usage
It can be used as object and attributive. It can be used in written language as an example. The eighth poem of Wu Weiye's "Chancheng" in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
During the Jin Dynasty, Yue Guang was good at pure speech, but he could not write. When he was about to leave Yin Ren, he asked Pan Yue to make a statement. Pan Yue said, "you should have your will." Yue Guang then dictated more than 200 sentences to express his mind. Pan Yue sorted it out and became a famous work. At that time, people commented: "if Guang does not fake Yue's pen and Yue does not take the aim of Guang, he will not be so beautiful."
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Jin, Yue guangzhuan: "if you are good at plain speech but not good at writing, you will let Yin and Pan Yue be your representatives. Yue said, "you should have your will." Guangnai wrote 200 sentences to express his ambition. Yue became famous for his inferior comparison. Xianyun, a man of the time, said, "if Guang doesn't fake Yue's pen and Yue doesn't take the aim of Guang, he can't be so beautiful."
Chinese PinYin : pān wén lè zhǐ
Pan wenyuezhi
If you don't work hard when you are young, you will be sad when you are old. shào zhuàng bù nǔ lì,lǎo dà tú shāng bēi
The moon threatens the tongue. yǔ chū yuè xié
You cloud startles the Dragon. yóu yún jīng lóng
Three women and two sisters in law. sān pó liǎng sǎo
delay the fulfilment of a military plan. yí wù jūn jī
riddled with a thousand wounds. bǎi kǒng qiān chuāng