Yuanzhen Zehui
Yuanzhen Zehui, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu ā NT í ngz é Hu ì, which means to describe the convergence of things. From "Shaoshi Shanfang bicong · Jiuliu introduction".
The origin of Idioms
Hu Yinglin of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the preface of Jiuliu, Shaoshi Shanfang bicong: "in the Han Dynasty, the people of Dong and Jia gradually became mellow and simple. A generation of articles began to return to the ancients. Huainan was also a group of flashy people. The outline of the book was obscene, and it was a collection of profound and profound works. It was compiled for this purpose."
Word usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : yuān tíng zé huì
Yuanzhen Zehui
roundness inside but squareness outside. wài fāng nèi yuán
go hither and thither to call for. bēn zǒu hū háo
the people are rich and the country is strong. mín fù guó qiáng
There are many bedridden houses. zhī chuáng dié wū
treatment chosen according to the variability of an individual. yīn rén zhì yí
folly of trying to see the sky with a basin over one 's head. dài pén wàng tiān
insidious slander which gradually soaks into the mind. jìn rùn zhī zèn