Rijiaozhuting
Rijiaozhuting, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ì Ji ǎ ozh ū t í ng, which means to describe a person with a broad forehead, a full heaven and an extraordinary appearance. It comes from the epitaph of Zhao Gong, general of Zhou Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Sun and moon
Idiom usage
Li Jiang was the governor of Huazhou, and said: "rijiaozhuting is not a mediocre person, Mingjing is not suitable for a son." It's a higher rank. Biography of Li Jue in New Tang Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
The epitaph of Zhao Gong, general of Zhou Dynasty, written by Gengxin in the Northern Zhou Dynasty: "it's to subdue the spirit with Weiyue, to be born virtuous, to be a son, to be a high five capitals, and to be a minister, to shine thousands of miles."
Chinese PinYin : rì jiǎo zhū tíng
Rijiaozhuting
wading in deep water and treading on thin ice. lín shēn lǚ bó
tangled and invovled endlessly. sī lái xiàn qù
put one 's hand to one 's mouth to hide one 's laughter. yǎn kǒu hú lú
make trouble under a certain pretext. shī chū yǒu míng
smear buddha 's head with dung. fó tóu zhuó fèn
have no means to borrow money. jiè dài wú mén