red and ornate carriages used by noblemen in ancient times
Zhu lunhuahu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ū L ú nhu á g ǔ, which means the ornate cars used by ancient princes and nobles. It's a metaphor for nobility. It comes from the biography of Zhang Er and Chen Yu in historical records.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Zhang Er and Chen Yu in historical records, Fan Yang ordered him to take the wheel of Zhu and drive Yan and Zhao Jiao
Idiom usage
It is used as subject, object and attribute.
Examples
Zhu Lunhua hub, embracing thousands of miles. The book with Chen Bo by Liang Qiuchi in the Southern Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : zhū lún huá gǔ
red and ornate carriages used by noblemen in ancient times
wish your kids a promising future. wǔ zǐ dēng kē
make the enemy yield and the different nation submit to the authority. huái dí fù yuǎn
bad name for thousands of years. yí chòu wàn zǎi