Congenial
Congenial, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ì y ì Xi ā NGT ó u, which means that the interests and friendship are congenial. It comes from the praise of four friends under the forest by Jin Ruoxu.
Word information
qìyìxiāngtóuㄑㄧˋㄧˋㄒㄧㄤㄊㄡˊ
Congenial
Explanation of words
It means that people's interests and friendship agree with each other. Jin Wang Ruoxu's praise of the four friends in the forest: "the four of us have the same smell and the same spirit, so we don't get together, we get together and we are happy." It is also called "congenial spirit". Chapter 11 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms: "a certain taishici is my humble friend in the East China Sea. It's not like being close to Kong Rong. It's not like being a local party. It's like sharing worries and suffering together
The origin of Idioms
[source]: Jin · Wang Ruoxu's praise of four friends in the forest: "the four of us have similar odor and are like-minded, so we don't get together, we get together and we are happy."
Discrimination of words
Synonym: congenial; antonym: none; grammar: used as predicate and attribute; used in communication, etc
Chinese PinYin : qì yì xiāng tóu
Congenial
there is no limit to lust and covetousness. tān yù wú yì
one 's unforgettable former wife. gù jiàn qíng shēn
even a drop of water couldn 't leak out. shuǐ xiè bù tòu