A couple of birds
The Chinese idiom refers to a man's wife or couple. It comes from the third part of Lu zhailang written by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty.
explain
Ying and Yan refer to women; couple refers to partners. A man's wife or couple.
source
The third part of Lu zhailang written by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty: "you have your own couple. I don't care about everything from now on." Xu fuzuo's "the story of the red pear · Shiyao" in Ming Dynasty: "how can we make an appointment for the couple of Yings and yanlv in three spring, and forget that you are so far away."
Discrimination of words
Common degree: common emotional color: commendatory words; grammatical usage: as object and attribute; refers to lovers; idiom structure: combined generation time: Ancient idiom riddle: Lovers
A couple of birds
turn round on one 's gallopingsteed and aim an arrow at - yuè mǎ wān gōng
follow the previous wise ways - zǔ shù yáo shùn,xiàn zhāng wén wǔ
cheer the heart and please the feelings - yí qíng lǐ xìng
set long narrow flag to call back the spirit of the dead - yáng fān zhāo hún
roll up one 's sleeves and raise one 's fists to fight - xuān quán luǒ xiù