A thousand pieces of paper
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī zh ǐ Qi ā NJ ī n, which means that a piece of paper is worth thousands of gold, which means that the value of poetry is very high. It's from the picture of Ming FA Gao Xuan Guo.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Shidao of the Song Dynasty wrote a poem: "King Teng, nymphal butterfly, river capital horse, a thousand pieces of paper are not worth the price."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : yī zhǐ qiān jīn
A thousand pieces of paper
sounds of crowing cocks and barking dogs were heard around -- two places are very close to each other. jī quǎn xiāng wén
be honored with high official titles. gāo guān zūn jué
console oneself with false hopes. shuō méi zhǐ kě