The Phoenix sighs at the tiger
Feng sighs and Hu sees, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f è NGT à NH à sh à, which means elegant conversation and elegant bearing. It comes from Wen Xuan Cao Zhi and Wu Ji Chong Shu.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: "Wenxuan · Cao Zhi's" book with Wu Ji Chongshu ":" the foot of the eagle raises its body, the Phoenix sighs and the tiger looks at it, which means that Xiao Cao is not enough for a couple, and Wei Huo is not enough for MOU. " Li Shanzhu: "phoenix is used to describe literature, tiger is used to describe martial arts. Sighing is like singing. Take the meaning of beauty and strength. "
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as predicate and attribute; used of human temperament
The Phoenix sighs at the tiger
talk till one 's tongue and lips are parched - shé bì chún jiāo
do things offensive to god and reason - wéi tiān hài lǐ
be glad to have one 's errors pointed out - wén guò zé xǐ
go for the small things and miss things that are worthwhile - tān xiǎo shī dà