a healthy , aged person
Pang Mei Hao FA, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p á NGM é IH à of à, which means white eyebrows and hair, and describes the appearance of an old man. It's from the musical instrument list.
Idiom explanation
Pang: variegated; Hao: pure white.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Wei of the Tang Dynasty wrote in his musical instrument list that "the sacred worship is more than the worship, the rites are all over the immortals, and the nine costumes are thought to be you, so it's called Pang Mei Hao FA."
Idiom usage
To describe the appearance of an old man. example standing on both sides to watch the excitement, there are also a few old men who have read books. The 36th chapter of biography of children heroes written by Wen Kang in Qing Dynasty and sixuanfu written by Zhang Heng in Han Dynasty: "Wei shows his eyebrows, but langqianxi." Li Shan quoted the story of Hanwu: "Yan Si, I don't know who he was. He was a Lang when Emperor Wen of Han Dynasty. When Emperor Wu tasted the chariot and passed the Lang department, he saw Si's eyebrows and hair Tang Yin's shishoutang poem in Ming Dynasty: "Zhou Jun was a good man for four generations, and he was a centenary of his ancestors in Yuan Dynasty. From then on, the name of "Shishou" should be given to Pang Mei and Hao FA Chapter 36 of the story of heroes and Heroines: "stand on both sides and watch the bustle. There are also some old men with big eyebrows and white hair who have read books."
Chinese PinYin : páng méi hào fà
a healthy , aged person
insatiably greedy like wolves and tigers. láng tān hǔ shì
The clouds are disturbing and breaking. yún rǎo fú liè
move in and out with lightning speed and wizard elusiveness. guǐ chū diàn rù
Helping the turtle and losing the turtle. yuán biē shī guī
tears and mucus flowing down rapidly. tì sì zòng héng