Baoma Xiangche
Baoma Xiangche, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ om ǎ Xi ā ngch ē, which means elegant riding. It comes from Chang'an Road by Wei Yingwu of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The poem of Chang'an Road written by Wei Yingwu of Tang Dynasty: "BMW comes to build a chapter, but Xiangche turns to avoid the road."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: Baoma Xiangche, xianglunbaoqi [antonym]: malache Leima
Idiom usage
I've left the singers and dancers in the cold, and I've had a good time. In Yuan Dynasty, the third part of Wang Shifu's Lichun hall and Shen Quanqi's Shangsi Riyi Weibin Yingzhi poem: "Baoma Xiangche qingweibin, Hongtao Biliu Yichun."
Baoma Xiangche
point to a hill and talk about grindstone -- make concealed reference to something - zhǐ shān mài mò
tears and mucus flowing down rapidly - tì sì zòng héng
take care of every single thing personally - shì bì gōng qīn