Climbing the scales
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ā NL í NF ù y ì, which means to curry favor with powerful people to get rich. It comes from Han Yang Xiong's fayan Yuanqian.
Idiom usage
It's used as predicate, attributive and object. It's used as an example. Only my younger brother had been awarded the title of "Tu Lu" as early as possible. Ning Zhaomin, the leader of zongmeng, was granted the title of "Rong" in Tang Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Pan Long Fu Feng
The origin of Idioms
Han Yangxiong's "fayan Yuanqian" said: "Panlong scale, attached to the Phoenix wing, Xun to Yang, exuberant beyond its reach."
Idiom explanation
Climbing: climbing; attachment: attachment. Fawning on powerful people for wealth.
Chinese PinYin : pān lín fù yì
Climbing the scales
Fortune is the beginning of disaster. fú wéi huò shǐ
as brilliant as the sun , the moon and the stars. bǐng rú rì xīng