dearer than one 's own flesh and blood
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q í ngy ú g ǔ R ò u, which means to describe deep feelings. From Ji Xuan Li.
Pronunciation, explanation
Pronunciation: Q í ngy ú g ǔ R ò u. It's very emotional.
source
Tang Xianzu of the Ming Dynasty wrote to Li Jixuan: "although it is morally and morally right for my brother to make friends with him, his feelings are beyond his bones and flesh, and he has abandoned them for more than ten years before he can ask. Is it true that there is a popular feeling?" examples: worship and know Qingyang. Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio Wang LIULANG in Qing Dynasty
words whose meaning is similar
The feeling is congenial and profound
antonym
They are unsympathetic and irreconcilable
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: more than: more than; flesh and blood: a metaphor for close relatives. It's very emotional. Examples of idioms: degree of common use: uncommon emotion color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as predicate and attribute; structure of idioms with commendatory meaning: generation age of subject predicate type: Ancient idiom sound: more than, can not be read as "Y". The idiom distinguishes the form: surpasses, cannot write "in".
Chinese PinYin : qíng yú gǔ ròu
dearer than one 's own flesh and blood