Mink and dog belong to each other
Diao Gou Xiang, a Chinese idiom, is di ā og ǒ uxi ā ngsh ǔ in pinyin, which means a mixture of authenticity and pros and cons. It comes from the story of a stone building written by Cui Zhuo of Tang Dynasty.
Idioms and allusions
"Xu Shichuang Shi" written by Cui Zhuo of Tang Dynasty: "since childhood, he has learned and admired Lu Gong's calligraphy After missing Qi Gao's trace, he ordered him to attack and treat his disability and make up for it. Although the true and the false hanging Yue, Diao and Gou belonged to each other, and he looked back at Lu Gong's posthumous writings, which made it clear later
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as object and attribute
Mink and dog belong to each other
Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. - qíng rén yǎn lǐ chū xī shī
establish an estate and hand down an inheritance - chuàng yè chuí tǒng
every form of evil cannot be done - zhū è mò zuò
steal the beams and pillars and replace them with rotten timbers - chōu liáng huàn zhù
eagerly await the return of one 's son - yǐ mén yǐ lǚ