A thousand miles of divine friendship
A thousand li Shenjiao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NL ǐ sh é NJI ā o, meaning thousands of miles apart, spiritual fit. A deep friendship. It's from the book "the poem of ability · the difference".
The origin of Idioms
Tang Mengqi's "original poem · Zhengyi" said: "Yuan Xianggong was the censor, and he was in Zitong. At that time, Bai Shangshu was in Beijing. He was kind to famous people and had a drink under the flowers. He sent a poem to Yuan Dynasty, saying: "when flowers are drunk, they will break new worries. When they are drunk, they will fold flowers to raise wine. I suddenly remember that my old friend had gone to Liangzhou in the sky At the time of Yuan Dynasty, Guo and Baocheng also wrote a sleepwalking poem: "the brother of Mengjun, Qu Jiangtou, is also swimming in the courtyard of Ci'en. The post officials called for people to line up their horses, and suddenly they were in ancient Liangzhou. " A thousand miles of divine friendship, if it is in accordance with the contract, the way of friendship is not expected
Idiom explanation
Thousands of miles apart, spiritual fit. A deep friendship.
Chinese PinYin : qiān lǐ shén jiāo
A thousand miles of divine friendship
Hearing the wind is the rain. tīng jiàn fēng jiù shì yǔ
scattered and broken jade -- snow. luàn qióng suì yù
Strong wind and strong grass. jí fēng zhāng jìn cǎo
a good sword remains always sharp. bǎo dāo bù lǎo
gratitude for the slightest favour received or grudge against the slightest wrong done. sī ēn fà yuàn
to be above all material desires. chāo rán xiàng wài
mouth parched and tongue scorched. kǒu gàn shé jiāo