The natural endowment of the lake
Pohu endowment, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ē IH ú B ǐ ngli á ng, which means broad and grand. It comes from Huang xianzhuan, the book of the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Huang xianzhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "Uncle Du Wang is like a thousand Qingpi, which is not clear and confusing, and can not be measured."
Analysis of Idioms
Broad mindedness
Idiom usage
It's an attributive and adverbial to describe a person's great spirit. It's only the appearance of the spirit, gold and stone, the talent of the lake, the beauty of the world, and the wisdom of virtue. A tribute to Li changshixun in Yousheng by Huang Tao in Tang Dynasty
The natural endowment of the lake
songs of a highbrow type will find very few people to join in the chorus - qǔ gāo hè guǎ
Turning the past into the future - yǎn gé wéi xuān
profound in substance and beautiful in style - chén bó jué lì
unable to get down but dangerous to go on - shì chéng qí hǔ
may the hoofs of the unicorn bring you much luck -- may you have many good sons - lín zhǐ chéng xiáng