become full-fledged
Plump, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǔ m á of ē NGM ǎ n, meaning that the bird's feathers have grown. Metaphor is mature or powerful. From Du Shi Yan Zhi.
The origin of Idioms
Volume 12 of Du Shi Yan Zhi written by Wu Mingshi in Qing Dynasty: "among the forest, there are those who are full-fledged and live in the Olympic aid, which is beyond our expectation."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] Kong Wuli is powerful, powerful and powerful, and has a large number of people
Idiom usage
If Heluo is not protected, sit and see Li Zicheng, the future will be unimaginable. (Yao xueyin, Li Zicheng, Vol.2, Chapter 51)
Idiom story
In the Western Han Dynasty, when Liu Bang became emperor, he made Liu Ying, the son of empress Lu, the crown prince. He wanted to make Liu Ruyi the crown prince because he favored Mrs. Qi. Empress Lu asked Zhang Liang for advice, and Zhang Liang asked Prince Liu Ying to invite four sages from Shangshan. Liu Bang saw that the crown prince was assisted by the four sages of Shangshan, and his wings had already been established, so he gave up the idea of establishing another crown prince.
Chinese PinYin : yǔ máo fēng mǎn
become full-fledged
The stolen goods are in a mess. zāng huò láng jí
with tangled hair and plain clothes. luàn tóu cū fú
A hundred actions are better than one silence. bǎi dòng bù rú yī jìng