Fu zhuhongqiao
Fu zhuhongqiao, a Chinese idiom, whose pinyin is f ù zh ū h ó ngqi á o, refers to the loss of a letter. It comes from Ren birthday, a new account of the world, written by Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Liu Yiqing's Ren birthday, a new account of the world, said, "Yin Hongqiao was a county of Yuzhang. When he left, all his servants attached a hundred letters. When he arrived at the stone, he learned to throw it into the water. Because Zhu said, "the one who sinks sinks sinks, and the one who floats floats floats. Yin Hongqiao can't send a letter."
Idiom story
When he left office, many people entrusted him to take letters back to his hometown, because there was no post office at that time. He accepted more than 100 letters politely, but when he arrived at shitouzhu, he threw all the letters into the river. When people can't get a message, they always think that it's from tohongqiao
Idiom usage
In modern society, sending letters will never be lost.
Analysis of Idioms
A letter from Hong Qiao
Fu zhuhongqiao
Drinking Valley and perching Hill - yǐn gǔ qī qiū
Cages are a kind of nourishment - juàn láo yǎng wù
Knowing is knowing, not knowing is not knowing - zhī zhǐ wéi zhī zhī,bù zhī wéi bù zhǐ
by juggling with deceit made it real - nòng jiǎ chéng zhēn