Pei zihuaihuang
Peizihuaihuang is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is p è iz ǐ Hu á Ihu á ng, which means wearing purple seal ribbon around the waist and carrying gold official seal in the arms. Prime ministers and Taiwei in Han Dynasty are all gold seal and purple ribbon, which refers to high-ranking officials. It comes from the biography of fan Ju and Cai Ze in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of fan Ju and Cai Ze in historical records, it is said that "forty three years is enough for me to eat meat and be rich before I bow to the Lord."
Analysis of Idioms
Huaihuang Peizi
Idiom usage
To be in a high position. example today's meritorious officials and famous generals are in order. Pei zihuaihuang praised the strategy of strategizing; he built a festival and served the duty of the battlefield. In the Southern Dynasties, Liang Qiuchi's book with Chen Bozhi and the book of Three Kingdoms, Wei Zhi and Wudi Ji, Pei Songzhi's notes on "advocating the life of our ancestors" quoted the king of Jin Shen's book of Wei: "the Marquis and generals are lucky to be able to climb the dragon's gallop, to steal and work, to wear purple and yellow, and to cover hundreds." "selected works of Zhaoming" (Volume 4, 13): Pei zihuaihuang praises the strategy of strategizing. Chapter 135 a good official in the biography of the old book of the Tang Dynasty: crossing the state and even the county, is it a kind of jackal and tiger. As a result, the earth collapsed and died.
Chinese PinYin : pèi zǐ huái huáng
Pei zihuaihuang
be lenient towards villains and let them grow traitors. gū xī yǎng jiān
attachment to the things and people related to a loved one. wū wū zhī ài
flee far away in getting wind of sth.. wén fēng yuǎn yáng
one 's head was shaped like a leopard 's , his eyes round. bào tóu huán yǎn