persons of rank
Wu Hou Qi GUI, a Chinese idiom, is w ǔ h ó UQ ī Gu ì in pinyin, which generally refers to the high officials. It comes from the poem "Liu Yelang presents judge Xin" by Li Bai of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Li Bai of Tang Dynasty wrote a poem "liuyelang presented to judge Xin:" in the past, I was drunk in Chang'an, and the five Marquises and seven nobles drank the same wine. "
Idiom usage
In a-ying's light market, why do you advocate the Lantern Festival
Chinese PinYin : wǔ hòu qī guì
persons of rank
The meaning comes from the text. yuán wén shēng yì
Three days later, I'll be treated with new eyes. shì bié sān rì,guā mù xiāng dài