Lost hairpin
Yizan luolu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í Z ā NDU ò L ǚ, which means old things or old feelings. It's from Tang Zhang Shuo's the second form of prime minister rang you.
Idiom usage
It is used as an object or attributive; it refers to old things or old feelings
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Yi Zan Xie, Yi Zan Tuo, Yi Zan Zhui
The origin of Idioms
Tang Zhang said in the second form of prime minister rang you: "I'm glad that I'm so kind as to have the virtue of ambition." The second poem of Luo Yin in Tang Dynasty, which was written by Dou Shangshu of Xuanzhou, is: "the lost hairpin should be remembered, and the door guests are only servants now."
Idiom explanation
It refers to old things or old feelings. It is the same as "the lost hairpin".
Chinese PinYin : yí zān duò lǚ
Lost hairpin
Insects, sand, ape and crane. chóng shā yuán hè
man of great courage looks like a coward. dà yǒng ruò qiè
good fortune is often followed by calamity. fú guò zāi shēng
Attack each other by letter. hán shǐ xiāng gōng