The history of Danqi
Yinqi Liluo, a Chinese idiom, is y í NQ í L ì luॸin Pinyin, which means that the descriptive behavior is extraordinary, the same as "Yinqi Leiluo". It comes from the epitaph of Xie Jun in Shi Xi.
The origin of Idioms
Huang Zongxi's epitaph of Shiyi Xiejun in the Qing Dynasty said, "I read Du Boyuan's Gu Yin, and recorded 29 people. They had a history of Danqi, either writing a letter, floating on the sea, or sinking into the abyss with a sword."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : yín qí lì luò
The history of Danqi
If you don't enter the tiger's den, you will get the tiger's son. bù rù hǔ xué,yān dé hǔ zǐ
when good luck come , one has good ideas. fú zhì xīn líng
lock the stable door after the horse is stolen. zéi qù guān mén
To drink and make medicine empty. zhuó yíng jì xū
If you are not high, you are not low. gāo bù chéng,dī bù jiù