Phoenix and Dragon
Fengzhulongpan, Pinyin is f è ngzh ù L ó NGP á n, a Chinese idiom, which means flying like a phoenix and winding like a dragon; it refers to the flying, vigorous and graceful posture. It comes from the biography of Wang Xizhi in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Wang Xizhi in the book of Jin, it is said that "when you look at the work of the point and drag, you can see how wonderful the cutting is. The smoke is falling and dew is forming, and the shape is like broken but still connected; the Phoenix is like a dragon, and the momentum is like slanting but opposite straight."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in calligraphy, etc. example the Phoenix, the dragon and the dragon are circling, and the Taihang Mountains are constantly green. In Qing Dynasty, Nalanxingde's poem "Hujia Xishan" and "Changsheng Palace" come out in the second: just steal the view, Phoenix and dragon, love to kill the two heads and two fans. According to Hou Fangyu's newly moved stele of yanlugong in Qing Dynasty, "those who stand alone on the stele are resplendent in the clouds, and the pen is broken but still connected; the Phoenix and the dragon are flat, and the momentum is slanting but in any case."
Phoenix and Dragon
play off one power against another - yǐ yí zhì yí
There is no sneer at the end of the story - kuài xià wú jī
Stop the clouds and circle the beams - è yún rào liáng
make comments about the good or the evil of a character - yuè dàn chūn qiū