San dieyang pass
Sandiyangguan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NDI é y á nggu ā n, which means the tune of farewell in ancient times. Later, it also refers to farewell. From Weicheng Qu.
Notes on Idioms
Sandi: sing a sentence repeatedly; Yangguan: the name of ancient Guan, in the southwest of Dunhuang County, Gansu Province.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Wei of the Tang Dynasty wrote the poem "Wei Cheng Qu": "Wei Cheng Dynasty rain and dust, guest house green willow color new. I'd like to urge you to have a glass of wine and come out of Yangguan in the west without an old friend. "
Idiom usage
It is used as an object and attribute. I've done so many things that I don't listen to my worries. I'm just worried about a sad painting. A wedge in Prince yuan's the peach land by mistake
Chinese PinYin : sān dié yáng guān
San dieyang pass
Nothing can be done without effect. wú shī bù xiào
Explain the mystery but not the white. zhù xuán shàng bái
more than can be counted on one 's fingers. zhǐ bù shèng lǚ
be careless about one 's dress. bù xiū biān fú
collect bits of fur under the foxes ' forelegs to make a robe. jí yè wéi qiú