Shangyi Xiading
Shangyi Xiading is a Chinese idiom, pronounced sh à ngy í Xi à D à ng, which means a very precious antique. It comes from Lu Xianbao raft.
explain
Interpretation: bronze ritual vessels of Xia and Shang Dynasties. It is generally called extremely precious antiques.
allusion
Source: Shen Qifeng's "Xiedu · lvxianbaoraft" in Qing Dynasty: "the flavor of Junwen is like" Liangjing ", and the second is hanchaosuhai. If you use it to seek fame, for example, you can still hold the four of the five capitals of Shang, Yi, Xiading and Zhuo, which is not precious, but not as good as those who know." example: its harm is also shocking, shaking the ears and polluting the light. The seventh chapter of the wizard of Oz by Li Baichuan in Qing Dynasty
Discrimination of words
Synonyms: xiadingshangyi idiom degree of common use: General idiom emotional color: neutral idiom idiom language: as object and attribute; refers to cultural relics idiom structure: combined idiom generation time: modern idiom
usage
As an object or attribute; of cultural relics
Chinese PinYin : shāng yí xià dǐng
Shangyi Xiading
of men shouting and horses neighing. rén hǎn mǎ sī
topple the mountains to crash the egg -- to cause a disaster to come. pái shān yā luǎn