each gets his due
Yuyueyuanfei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ú Yu è Yu ā NF ē I, which means fish swim in the water and eagles fly in the sky. It means that everything is in its place and free. It comes from Shi Da Ya Han Lu.
The origin of Idioms
It is said in Shi Da Ya Han Lu: "the kite flies against the sky and the fish leaps into the abyss." Mao Zhuan: "it's said that we should observe the whole world." Kong yingdashu: "Mao thought that the king and Wang Jide were insightful, and wrote about it from top to bottom. Above it, the kite can fly to the sky to swim, and below it, the fish can jump into the abyss and enjoy themselves. " Later, "fish leaping and kite flying" means that the creatures in the world act willfully and enjoy themselves. The preface of Wei Yuan in the Qing Dynasty: "the master and CI Shang talked about the poem and told us that the fish leaped and the kite flew, and there were all kinds of things between heaven and earth. Could it be a poem?" Hong Rengan, the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom, wrote in his military records: "the Dragon leaps and the tiger falls to the bottom, and the fish leaps and the kite flies to the top." It is also called "fish kite". The second poem of Li Dongyang's "inscription on painting" in Ming Dynasty: "flying away in the world has its own nature. Poets have sung about fish and kite since ancient times."
Idiom usage
In Hong Rengan's military records of the Taiping Heavenly Kingdom: "the Dragon leaps and the tiger crouches to the bottom of the pit, to enter the Xing Yao."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: chicken flying and dog leaping
Chinese PinYin : yú yuè yuān fēi
each gets his due
check evidence of both parties at court. duì bù gōng táng
take up a pen and complete an essay. yuán bǐ chéng zhāng
be soaked in a dark liquid without becoming back. niè ér bù zī
with much land and few people. dì guǎng rén xī