Tengda Feihuang
Tengda Feihuang is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t é NGD á f ē Ihu á ng, which means to describe the galloping horse; it refers to a sudden success and a rapid rise in official rank; it is the same as "a galloping horse". It comes from the legend of Yuanyang seal.
The origin of Idioms
In Huang junzai's the story of the legend of Yuanyang seal in the tearful ink of the golden pot in the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "when a woman first hears that she was born, she thinks about the difference for nine years, just like her talent, or ascends to the golden horse and steals to the jade hall, which is the choice of Tsinghua University of literature. It is not only the chance of the times, but also the chance of prosperity
Idiom usage
It refers to the rapid rise of status.
Examples
The 19th chapter of biography of heroes and heroines written by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "if we talk about the character and heart, we are the only one who is An'an student. It's a pity that he's clear but not expensive. He can't make a great success. "
Analysis of Idioms
A rising star
Chinese PinYin : téng dá fēi huáng
Tengda Feihuang
course of nature and one's conscience. tiān lǐ liáng xīn
give a dog a bad name and hang him. fèng cí fá zuì
heaven fragrance and national beauty. tiān xiāng guó sè
conceal the true state of affairs from above and below oneself. qī shàng wǎng xià
cannot distinguish between real and false. zhēn wěi mò biàn