Take care of a thousand gold
Yigu Qianjin is a Chinese idiom, pronounced y ī g ù Qi ā NJ ī n, which refers to the metaphor recommended by the sages. It comes from Cao Zhi's lost title (a beautiful person).
explain
[idiom] Yigu Qianjin [pronunciation] y ī g ù Qi ā NJ ī n [interpretation] Gu: look. In ancient times, bole, who was good at horse matching, looked at the horse, and the value of a good horse was worth thousands of gold. It is a metaphor to get the recommendation of the sage and double the value of people or things.
source
Three Kingdoms · Wei · Caozhi's poem "lost title (a beautiful person)" said: "a thousand gold heavy, why pearl jade money?"
Discrimination of words
General idioms
Chinese PinYin : yī gù qiān jīn
Take care of a thousand gold
The apes cry and the cranes complain. yuán tí hè yuàn
welcome the new and send off the old. yíng xīn sòng jiù