have mutual affinity
Yilingxi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī di ǎ NL í NGX ī, which means that there are lines on the horn of the rhinoceros, and the two ends are telepathic, so it is a metaphor of heart to heart; it refers to intelligence. From untitled.
The origin of Idioms
In Tang Dynasty, Li Shangyin's Untitled poem: "the body has no colorful Phoenix and wings, and the heart has a sense of intelligence."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. example across the 100 foot long whale, each pair flies colorful Phoenix, pass ~. In Yuan Dynasty, Wang Yuanheng's "the order of returning to seclusion" and in Tang Dynasty, Li Shangyin's "Untitled" poem is one of: "the body has no colorful Phoenix wings, and the heart has a sense of intelligence." In the Song Dynasty, Zhang Xiaoxiang's poem "Magnolia flower with reduced characters" reads: "the jade is graceful and graceful, and a little bit of spirit is sent to the eyes." The fourth fold of Zheng Guangzu's Qian Nu Li Hun in Yuan Dynasty: "if you don't have a hidden soul, it's like having a body." Wang Yufeng of Ming Dynasty wrote the pledge of burning incense: "however, both of them are satisfied, so they are called" two emotions ". I believe in the sea god from the beginning
Chinese PinYin : yī diǎn líng xī
have mutual affinity
mencius ' mother moves her home three times to better her son 's education. sān qiān zhī jiào
linger on with one 's last breath of life. gǒu yán cán xī
Incompatibility between ice and charcoal. bīng tàn bù xiāng róng