Zhu xiansan sighs
Zhu Xian San Tan, a Chinese idiom, is a Chinese phonetic alphabet, which refers to the beauty of music. From the book of rites, music.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, Yue Ji: "the Sutras in the temple of the Qing Dynasty, Zhu Xian and Shu Yue, one advocate and three sighs, have left a sound." Later, he referred to the beauty of music as "Zhu Xian San Tan".
Word usage
Used as an object; used in writing. In the Qing Dynasty, Zha Shenxing wrote the poem "to send Chen Zezhou to report his return to the prime minister": "the flowing water is really out of tune when it is played, and there is a lingering sound when it is sighed three times."
Chinese PinYin : zhū xián sān tàn
Zhu xiansan sighs
Be compatible with each other. bìng róng biàn fù
the early spring came on after the end of the last month of the year. là jìn chūn huí
make a quick decision as situation demands. zhuàng shì jiě wàn
A comparison between the pillow and the stem. zhěn gàn zhī chóu
A stalemate between clam and snipe. bàng yù xiāng chí