the year in which a great master deceased
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Su ì Z à IL ó ngsh é, which means the end of life. It comes from the biography of Zheng Xuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
The number of Qi is exhausted
The origin of Idioms
"In the spring of the fifth year, Confucius told him," from now on, this year will be at Chen, and the next year will be at Si. " Since Yi, with the combination of prophecy, know when the end of life, there are instant sleep disease Li Xianzhu: "in the biography of Gao Cai Bu Yu written by Liu Zhou of the Northern Qi Dynasty, it is said that" Chen is a dragon, he is a snake, and he is a dragon and a snake. ". The sage Ho, the metaphysics combines with the prophecy, "Gai said
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as object and attribute; used in written language; commendatory word. example the wind is like an ox and a horse when the adventure is blocked; the heart of the palace is broken. Wei xiuren's the fifth chapter of Hua Yue Chen in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : suì zài lóng shé
the year in which a great master deceased
A hundred legged insect is dead but not stiff. bǎi zú zhī chóng,sǐ ér bù jiāng
wait at one 's ease for the fatigued. yǐ yì dài láo
to compose poems while holding the lance horizontally in the saddle. héng shuò fù shī
time brings great changes to the world. cāng hǎi sāng tián