Qin Yue
Qin Yue Fei Yan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q í NYU è f é ij í, which means that the two places are far away from each other; it refers to estrangement and separation, which are not related. From on contending for ministers.
Notes on Idioms
Qin: today's Shaanxi area; Yue: today's Zhejiang area; fat and barren: fat and thin.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu of Tang Dynasty wrote on contending for officials: "if the Yue people regard the gain and loss of politics as the fatness and barrenness of the Qin people, they will not feel happy and sad."
Idiom usage
As an attributive or an object. Let your majesty teach officials to be responsible for the grazing of cattle and sheep, and persuade the people to be rich, so that they will not be regarded as fertile in the Qin Dynasty. History of the Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : qín yuè féi jí
Qin Yue
When animals are in trouble, they will eat. shòu kùn zé shì
resort to every conceivable means. wú suǒ bù yòng qí jí
plug one 's ears while stealing a bell. yǎn ěr tōu líng
the early spring came on after the end of the last month of the year. là jìn chūn huí