Dongfang Qianqi
Dongfang Qianqi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ō NGF ā ngqi ā NJ ì, which used to refer to a woman's husband. From Mo Shang sang.
The origin of Idioms
The poem "Mo Shang sang" written by Yuefu of Han Dynasty: "more than a thousand riders in the East, husband in the top."
Idiom usage
As an object; of a woman's husband. The poem "picking chrysanthemums" written by Emperor Jianwen of Liang Dynasty: "a thousand horses from the East riding on a Li horse, don't they go down the mountain to meet their old husband?"
Idiom story
Once upon a time, Luo Fu, a beautiful mulberry picking girl, met a misbehaving prefect on the road. The prefect wanted to tease her and pull her back to her house. Luo Fu told him straightforwardly that she had a husband, and that her husband was the head of a city. He had a thousand horses from the East, had both talent and appearance, and had a graceful demeanor. He was admired by all people. Please don't be paranoid any more.
Chinese PinYin : dōng fāng qiān jì
Dongfang Qianqi
be anxious to finish off the enemy immediately. miè cǐ zhāo shí
never relax your vigilance while you live in peace. ān bù wàng wēi
keep on repeating at great length. lián piān lèi zhēn
a situation dominated by three powerful rivals. dǐng zú zhī shì