the union of two families
Zhu chenzhihao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ū ch é nzh ī h ǎ o, which means that two families get married. From Zhu Chen village.
The origin of Idioms
Bai Juyi's poem Zhu Chen Village in Tang Dynasty: "in Gufeng County of Xuzhou, there is a village called Zhu Chen." There are only two surnames in a village, and the world is a marriage. "
Idiom usage
As an object; of marriage. The two families are close to each other. The male family is a well-dressed family, and the female family is a well-known Qing family. They have no suspicion of Qi and Zheng, and they will agree with Zhu and Chen. Lin Lanxiang, corporal Suiyuan in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
The mother of Zhu Yuanzhang, the emperor of Ming Dynasty, was surnamed Chen. When she was young and begging outside, an old woman surnamed Chen saved Zhu Yuanzhang's life (Zhu Yuanzhang recognized her as godmother). Later, when the emperor of Ming Dynasty claimed to be emperor, an old man in ragged clothes clamored to meet the emperor. When he met the guard, he said, "my son is sitting on the court Hall..." Zhang sent an order for the old man to go to the court to see what happened. He saw an old man who was staggering and ragged. Then he knelt down in front of the old woman and said, "it's the child who's unfilial and made his mother suffer...". From then on, Zhu Yuanzhang, the great ancestor of the Ming Dynasty, told the world: "Zhu Chen's family, Zhu Chen's family will be courteous, men's friends, and men's marriage will never betray Zhu Chen's friendship.".
Chinese PinYin : zhū chén zhī hǎo
the union of two families
make use of an opportunity to achieve one 's end. shùn shuǐ tuī zhōu
drift from one place to another. sì hǎi piāo líng