vain hope
Qihe Weiyang is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Q í h è w é iy á ng, which means to describe the desire to be an official, rich and immortal, or to describe greed and delusion. It comes from Qinyuan spring, seven harmonies and Linqing rhyme.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Kezhuang, Song Dynasty, wrote in Qinyuan spring, seven harmonies and Linqing rhyme: "waist money riding crane, who can predict things."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used of people's delusion and greed.
Chinese PinYin : qí hè wéi yáng
vain hope
phoenix crying in the morning. míng fèng zhāo yáng
Let go of the bull and scatter the horse. xiū niú sàn mǎ