Yin haoshukong
Yin haoshukong, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī NH à OSH ū K ō ng, which means that things are amazing. It's from the new words of the world.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, wrote "the new sayings of the world: dethroning and exempting:" the army of Yin Zhong (Yin Hao) was abandoned in Xin'an. All day long, they wrote empty words, and Yangzhou officials and people sought righteousness, chased them, stole them, and only wrote "aggressive and strange things."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. example the running water does not sound but sounds like it. The mountains are silent but not silent. It is said that there is no such thing as this. Li Yu, Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
Yin Hao, the governor of Yangzhou in the Eastern Jin Dynasty, was at odds with general Huan Wen. Wang Xizhi advised him to put state affairs first in the face of the enemy. Not only did Yin Hao not listen, but he led the Northern Expedition and was defeated many times. He was abandoned as a civilian and exiled to Xin'an. He read and recited poems all day and always wrote "aggressive strange things" on the paper to express his injustice.
Chinese PinYin : yīn hào shū kōng
Yin haoshukong
Raising tigers brings disaster. yǎng hǔ zì yí zāi
approaching seventy years of age. nián jìn gǔ xī
high walls and deep moat -- a defended city. gāo chéng shēn chí