Macaque crane
Xuanhe guanhou is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Xu ā NH è Gu à NH ó u, which means the crane in Xuanhe and the monkey in hat. It refers to the person who abuses the toilet and has no appearance. It comes from the public poetry of the news from Hangzhou and Taiwan at the end of the stone.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Ji of the Ming Dynasty wrote one of the public poems on the news of passing on Hangzhou and Taiwan at the end of the stone: "the pond fish, the curtain swallow, the crane and the crown monkey are in favor of the new."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : xuān hè guàn hóu
Macaque crane
a clear breeze and bright principles -- as of one 's deportment. qīng fēng liàng jié
burn famous string instrument for fuel and cook crane for meat -- offense against culture. shāo qín zhǔ hè
Basin facing the sky, bowl facing the ground. pén cháo tiān,wǎn cháo dì
charge into the enemy ranks. cuī fēng xiàn zhèn
appoint people on their merit. yě méi yí xián