Zhang Jia, Li Yi
Zhang Jia, Li Yi, a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ā ngji ǎ L ǐ y ǐ, which means Zhang San Li Si. From the book of brothers.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of admonishment brothers written by Zhang Huan of Han Dynasty, it is said that Zhang Jia slandered me and Li Yi blamed me. I have no fault, and I have done it
Idiom usage
Used as a subject or object; used in writing. In the book with Wang Xiushu written by Cao Cao of the Three Kingdoms period, it is said that "Zhang Jia and Li Yi are still ahead of each other, and this master's intention is not good."
Chinese PinYin : zhāng jiǎ lǐ yǐ
Zhang Jia, Li Yi
peace and tranquility under heaven. hǎi yàn hé qīng
believing in and admiring the ancients. xìn ér hào gǔ
The family is too rich to sit down. jiā lěi qiān jīn,zuò bù chuí táng
Remove the chaff and block the wind. pái kāng zhàng fēng