Long bridle
The Chinese four character idiom comes from the literary mind and Carving Dragons Tongbian written by Liang and Liu Xie of the Southern Dynasty. The explanation of the idiom is to use the long reins to control the horse pulling the cart far away. It refers to long-distance control, controlling other people or things. It refers to long-distance control, controlling other people or things.
terms
Long bridle
Phonetic notation
chángpèiyuǎnyù
Source of allusion
Liang Liuxie's "literary mind and Carving Dragons: general changes" in the Southern Dynasty: "it's to return to the literary tradition, to be broad and general, to read the general outline and discipline first, and then to expand the road of Quzhou, to set the key, to control the long distance, and to follow the section calmly."
words whose meaning is similar
Long bridle
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: use the long reins to drive the horse far away. It refers to remote control, controlling other people or things. An example of an idiom: to divide the power of the Frontier Fortress into the weak, to make it easy to be controlled, to protect the frontier fortress forever, and to make it a vassal. (the biography of Dou Wei in Old Tang Dynasty) degree of common use: rare emotional color: commendatory words grammatical usage: as object and attribute; refers to remote control idiom structure: combined generation time: ancient idiom riddle: remote control
Long bridle
his name is enough to strike terror in people 's hearts - xiān shēng duó rén
The horse does not get rid of its saddle - mǎ bù jiě ān
The best way is the best - qǔ fǎ hū shàng,jìn dé hū zhōng