Whitefly
Bai Bi Qing Fei is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is B á IB ì Q ī ngy í ng, which means white jade and flies. It means good and evil, loyal and sycophantic. From Hu Chuzhen's forbidden house.
The origin of Idioms
In the Tang Dynasty, Chen zi'an and Hu Chuzhen's forbidden house, the poem: "if the green flies are the same, the white Bi will be wronged."
Idiom usage
In Qing Dynasty, Qian Qianyi's epitaph of Xie Fujun, the censor of Fengjian: "Nao song preaches, military chariots are at the door. Kaile's offering is slandering Kong Xing. You said, "what's the harm, white jade and green flies." Wu Weiye of the Qing Dynasty, the elegy to Wu Jizi, said: "the poems are more graceful than the others, and the white Bi and the green flies are more than the others."
Whitefly
The school is short but the school is long - jiào duǎn liáng cháng
Of the same breath and from joint branches - tóng qì lián zhī