Xi men's poor Lane
Ximenqiongxiang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x í m é nqi ó ngxi à ng, which means to describe the poor and humble place. It is also called "Xi men Peng Xiang". It's from hard to go.
The origin of Idioms
Gao Shi's poem "difficult journey" in Tang Dynasty: "is it like a safe place for young people in the east? There is no car in the poor lane. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in life.
Examples
Wang Bo of the Tang Dynasty wrote in his preface to the poems of seeking visits in summer: "Xi men and Peng Xiang, you will come to visit Gao Shi; Cong GUI and you LAN, you will like to see Wang and sun."
Tang Gaoshi's "journey is difficult" poem: "do you know the East neighbor's youth? There is no car in the poor lane. "
In Tang Dynasty, Zhang Jiuling wrote a five rhymed poem after he went out with yuan buque to find Cai Shiyi Hui: "crossing chenjiaxiang, poetry and Mencius are next to each other.
Wei Zhuang, the former Shu Dynasty, wrote "twenty rhymes of the work of meeting with the elder Xue in the early autumn" that "the Ying hall flows GUI's shadow, and the Chen Lane gathers Che's sound."
Chinese PinYin : xí mén qióng xiàng
Xi men's poor Lane
Small power and heavy responsibility. lì xiǎo rèn zhòng
Feeling the past but the present. gǎn jīn wéi xī