Queen Lu Qian
Wang Hou Lu Qian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w á NGH ò UL ú Qi á n, which means that poetry and prose are equally famous. It comes from Yang Jiong, biography of Wenyuan in the old book of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Jiong, a biography of Wenyuan in the old book of the Tang Dynasty, said: "Jiong, Wang Bo, Lu Zhaolin, and Luo Binwang are equally famous in terms of words and prose. They are called Wang, Yang, Lu, and Luo, and also called" four heroes ". When I heard about it, I said, "I'm ashamed to be in front of Lu. I'm ashamed to be the queen." At that time, they thought so. "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. Example: one of the poems in farewell to the emperors of the Qinhuai shogunate written by Jin yuanhaowen: "empress Wang and Lu Qian went back to the east of the Yangtze River and the north of the Weihe River." The east of the Yangtze River and the north of the Weihe River linger for a long time, and the position of Queen Lu Qian is difficult. ---Yu Dafu's poem "Wen Yang Yunshi's obituary"
Idiom story
In the early Tang Dynasty, poetry and prose were very active. Among them, the four outstanding poets were Wang Bo, Yang Jiong, Lu Zhaolin and Luo Binwang. When someone tried to rank them, Yang Jiong said, "I'm ashamed to be in front of Lu. I'm ashamed to be the queen." People think this ranking is reasonable.
Chinese PinYin : wáng hòu lú qián
Queen Lu Qian
sit idle and enjoy the fruits of others ' work. zuò xiǎng qí chéng
take a heavy burden and embark on a long road. rèn zhòng zhì yuǎn
an orphan-calf injures the nursing cow -- ingratitude. gū dú chù rǔ