AI suhao Gu
AI Su Hao Gu is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is à is à h à og à, which means not following the fashion. From Laozi.
Analysis of Idioms
A Shi tends to be popular
Idiom usage
It's not fashionable. In the Analects of Confucius, Shuer: "Confucius said: tell but not write, believe and cherish the past, and steal better than Lao Peng." In the book of the Song Dynasty, biography of recluse, Wang Hongzhi: "Your Highness loves the ancient, always like cloth clothes." Huang peilie's postscript (Ji Kang's collection) in Qing Dynasty: "posterity is declining, and many things are lost, so we can regret it! However, it will make posterity think of the person while getting the thing, so as to know that there was a person in the past Nowadays, fewer and fewer people are able to love the past.
The origin of Idioms
Lao Tzu: "to be simple, to be selfish and to have few desires."
AI suhao Gu
a school of silver carps moving down a stream - guò jiāng zhī jì
Gorgeous as peaches and plums, cold as ice - yàn ruò táo lǐ,lěng ruò bīng shuāng
Fill the pit and fill the valley - tián kēng mǎn gǔ