Copper camel grass
Tong Tuo Cao Mang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó ngtu ó C ǎ om ǎ ng, which means to describe the scene of the destruction of the territory after the Japanese occupation. It's the same as "copper camel and thorns". It comes from the biography of suojing in the book of Jin.
Idiom explanation
It describes the scene of the broken territory after the Japanese occupation. It's the same as "copper camel and thorns". Copper camel refers to the camel made of copper, which was often placed outside the palace in ancient times. Suo Jing sighed that the copper camel would lie in the thorns, and then used "copper camel grass mang" to describe the broken scene after the occupation of the territory.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Jin, suojing's biography, it is said that "Jing first knew the distance, and knew that the world would be in chaos. He pointed to the bronze camel at the gate of Luoyang palace and sighed:" meeting you in the middle ear of thorns! "
Analysis of Idioms
Homologous allusion: dark copper camel weeping copper camel thorns
Synonym: copacacia bramble
Idiom usage
As an attributive or clause, it refers to guopo
Examples
Wang Tingna of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the book of planting jade, i.e. promoting the meeting: "I can't care about the ancestral clan's Qiuxu, but I can't care about the copper camel's grass."
In Qujiang written by Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty, "I remember the smell of crane in Huating, and I remember the cry of copper camel in royal family."
Song Lu You "Xie Chi Chun" three words: "like Tianshan desolate disease Ji, tongtuo thorns, sprinkle Linfeng Qinglei."
Yuan and Song Dynasty "childe's family" poem: "do not believe in the thorns, a hundred years ago is the five Marquis family."
Kuang Zhouyi's Huifeng Cihua, Volume 3: "the pain of land sinking in China, the wound of thorns and thorns, often repose in CI."
Chinese PinYin : tóng tuó cǎo mǎng
Copper camel grass
take more time to consider the matter. shì huǎn zé yuán
build up the country through force. mǎ shàng dé tiān xià
be handsome and highly esteemed. xiàng mào táng táng