Feihong snow claw
Feihong snow claw is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is f ē IH ó ngxu ě zh ǎ o, which means to describe the trace left by things. It is the same as "Feihong Yinxue". From Hezi by Mianchi nostalgia.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of Song Dynasty wrote the poem "He Zi you Mianchi nostalgia": "life is everywhere like a flying star in the snow and mud. Occasionally, there are fingers and claws on the mud, and Hongfei is counting things. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to the impression of the past. (example) in the ukiyoe, there were flying tigers and snowclaws, so the mountains were in disorder. A study of Chen Weisong's Ci poem "wind into the pine · cool"
Idiom story
During the Song Dynasty, Su Shi and Su Zhe brothers once lived in a temple in Mianchi. They had a good relationship with the old monks and wrote poems on the walls of the temple. Later, Su Shi revisited his hometown and wrote the poem "Hezi from Mianchi nostalgia" with great emotion: "life is as if you know everywhere, it should be like a flying giant stepping on snow and mud. Occasionally, there are fingers and claws on the mud, and Hongfei is counting things. "
Feihong snow claw
in guangdong dogs bark at the snow - yuè quǎn fèi xuě
put on display different performances - yú lóng màn xiàn
All changes are inseparable from their ancestors - wàn biàn bù lí qí zōng
hold sb . 's whip and follow his stirrup - zhí biān suí dèng