Word after word
Liancheng is a Chinese idiom, pronounced y ī Z ì Li á NCH é ng, which refers to the subtlety of the extreme words. It comes from the biography of Wang Xie of Pengcheng in the book of Wei: "Cui Guang, the Minister of Huangmen, reads the poems of the late spring officials responding to the imperial edict. When it comes to Xie's poems, Gaozu still changed one word for them Xie said: "when I heard the three hundred words in the book of songs, I can cover it up in one word. Today, your Majesty's one word magazine is worth the price. "
explain
The subtlety of classical Chinese.
source
In the book of Wei, biography of Wang Xie in Pengcheng: "Cui Guang, the Minister of Huangmen, read the poems of the late spring officials responding to the imperial edict. When it comes to Xie's poems, Gaozu still changed one word for them Xie said: "when I heard the three hundred words in the book of songs, I can cover it up in one word. Today, your Majesty's one word magazine is worth the price. "
usage
It is a neutral idiom
Discrimination of words
In ancient times, when a chicken crows, the city opens. When a chicken crows, the word "woo" calls, which means "Oh". Lian can be understood as "Lian", which means connection. Therefore, it is called "Lian" (Lian) city.
Chinese PinYin : yī zì lián chéng
Word after word
What's right and what's wrong. mào shì qíng fēi
brush aside the clouds and see the face of the sun. bō yún dǔ rì
beat wildly with one 's fists on the bed and the pillows. chuí chuáng pāi zhěn
peaceful and mild steps -- walking slowly. yōng róng yǎ bù
conquer without a single fight. yǒu zhēng wú zhàn
endowed with extraordinary talents. lù hǎi pān jiāng
the few are no match for the many. sān bù niù liù