be well-known far and near
It's a well-known Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is Xi á RW é nm í n ɡ, which means it has a great reputation. From the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty, the first chapter of Gaodi.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty, the first chapter of Gaodi's Chronicle: "the discussion of the upper class is heard far and wide."
Idiom usage
Zhou Erfu's hometown of Beethoven: "Bonn is well deserved to be called the 'University City', just a university that once trained Marx and Heine." Tang. Xuanzang's "records of the western regions of the Tang Dynasty · the Republic of Nepal" said: "in modern times, there was a king, whose name was Yang, who lost to daimo. He was a master of science and wisdom. He made his own" statement theory "and paid attention to learning and respecting morality
Analysis of Idioms
The synonym is famous all over the world; the antonym is unknown
Chinese PinYin : xiá ěr wén míng
be well-known far and near
profess one thing, but mean another. kǒu bù yìng xīn
fail to find a solution due to grievance. dào xīn shī tú
be attacked by the enemy from without and within. biǎo lǐ shòu dí