With pearls and jade
Suizhu Jingyu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su í zh ū J ī ngy ù, which is the combination of suihou Zhu and heshibi. It generally refers to treasures or the top grade of treasures, and is also called "Suizhu Hebi". The source is the second work of Yumen tomb.
Interpretation of Idioms
With the combination of Hou Zhu and he Shi Bi. It generally refers to treasures or the best among treasures. It is the same as "following the pearls and harmonizing the jade".
The origin of Idioms
Yao Nai of the Qing Dynasty wrote a poem in the tomb of Yumen in the process: "follow the pearls, Jingyu, a rare scholar, a famous mountain in the golden chamber."
Analysis of Idioms
As subject, object, attribute; of treasure
Chinese PinYin : suí zhū jīng yù
With pearls and jade
sell offices and barter ranks. fàn guān yù jué