Chongxi leiqia
Chongxi leiqia, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ó NGX ī L ě iqia, which means peace and happiness for generations. It comes from Dong Du Fu written by Ban Gu of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu's Ode to Dongdu in Han Dynasty said: "when Yongping was approaching, we should attach great importance to the prosperity of the city and get along with it." Zhang Mi's note: "Xi: the light is also bright. Qia: he also said that Guangwu was the Ming Dynasty, and the Ming emperor followed it, so it was called Chongxi leiqia. "
Idiom usage
It refers to prosperity and stability. Example: in Ming Han Ang's Huangming, the treasure of painting: "when the Xuanmiao temple is in the Imperial Palace, it should attach great importance to the harmony between the West and the world, and pay attention to the CI Han in the spare time." Qian Qianyi's preface of the Qing Dynasty: "Shitian was born in Tianshun, grew up in Chenghong, grew up in the early Zhengde period, and became the emperor of the Changming County of China Liang Qichao's general discussion on political reform: "as for more than 200 years, the system has been changed in accordance with the times and has been in great harmony."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] emphasis on prosperity, harmony and leaves, rare idioms and neutral idioms
Chinese PinYin : chóng xī lěi qià
Chongxi leiqia
an old head on young shoulders. shǎo nián lǎo chéng
the rainbow clouds like brocade spread. yú xiá sàn qǐ
be greedy of eating and lazy in doing work. tān chī lǎn zuò
lay one 's head on one 's pillow and just drop off to sleep. gāo zhěn ān wò
the pine and the cypress endure cold winter together. suì hán sōng bǎi
cherish an old broom as if it were a thousand pieces of gold. bì zhǒu qiān jīn