The red of corn
Su hongguanjiu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ù h ó nggu à nxi à, which means that millet has changed color and qianchuanzi has been damaged. It describes the prosperity of the Taiping period. It comes from the biography of Jia Zhi in the book of Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Millet: millet; red: rotten and deteriorated; Guan: string for threading; rotten: rotten.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Han Dynasty, the biography of Jia's donation: "the millet in Taicang is rotten but not edible; the money in dunei is rotten but not correctable. "
Analysis of Idioms
Su Chen Guanxiu
Idiom usage
Combined; attributive; commendatory. Example: Chu people in Qing Dynasty were awarded "ten episodes of Jianhu, anti Qiqiao prose": "Gaoliang was sealed with Su, Su was red and decayed, and asked for a cross, but they didn't know eight or nine." It is also called "Su Chen Guan Jiu". "You are now in a thousand storehouses, old and decadent. You are working hard every day, making every effort. Now, in the autumn of half a century, there are no men and women, and you don't practice good. What's more, when?"
Chinese PinYin : sù hóng guàn xiǔ
The red of corn
be thrown away and swept clean. sǎo dì yǐ jìn
there was no parallel in history. shǐ wú qián lì
golden laws and precious rules. jīn kē yù niè