Flying head and snails
The Chinese idiom y í NGT ó UW ō Ji ǎ O means fly head and snail horn. It refers to small fame and fortune. It's from water melody.
Idiom explanation
Fly head: fly head, cochlea angle: snail angle. It refers to small fame and fortune.
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Zhao Shixia's water melody song head: "a little profit, a little mischief." Liu Qingfu, Song Dynasty, wrote the poem "spring in the jade chamber:" all the flies and snails are not competing. It's the same luxury of all ages. "
Idiom usage
Examples
Sigh ~ busy, suffered a lot of storms, turn to teach people Jingyao Yang. In Ming Dynasty, Gu Dadian wrote "the story of Qingshan · man Su Zhi Jiang". Hu Wenhuan of the Ming Dynasty wrote a book entitled "a selection of Qun Yin Lei · & lt; a tale of flat peaches · a question and answer of Dongbin" & gt; ": he boasted that when he sailed on land, he could not lift the tripod in the air. When he was violent by the River, all the tigers were killed, and there was a fight between flies and snails."
Chinese PinYin : yíng tóu wō jiǎo
Flying head and snails
be frightened out of one 's wits. dǎn liè hún fēi
a man of no common appearance and very noble in his looks. yī biǎo fēi fán
after rain the sky looks blue. yǔ guò tiān qíng
The island is thin and the countryside is cold. dǎo shòu jiāo hán