head of a house
A Gu a Weng, pronounced ā g ū w ē ng, is a Chinese idiom, which means father-in-law and mother-in-law.
usage
As the subject or object, it refers to the father-in-law and mother-in-law
explain
A: the prefix of a noun. Gu: my husband's mother. Weng: my husband's father. Refers to the father-in-law and mother-in-law.
Discrimination of words
"A" can't be read as "Yi".
source
The first volume of yinhualu written by Zhao Li in Tang Dynasty: "Guo Nuan tasted the music out of tune with Princess Shengping. His father was still in custody, and he was punished by his son. He was comforted by the call and said, "as the saying goes, if you are not stupid or deaf, you should not be a family or an old man."
Examples
In Wenkang's biography of heroes and heroines of the Qing Dynasty, there are two or three chapters: "in this case, you and I will learn from an unsophisticated aunt and Aung."
head of a house
gorgeously wrought -- colourfully and dazzlingly embellished - cuò cǎi lòu jīn