Prince Fulong
Fulong princes, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù Li è w á NGH ó u, which means that the degree of wealth is equal to that of kings and princes; it describes very rich. It comes from pinghuai book in historical records.
Idiom explanation
Xun: equal.
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian of the Western Han Dynasty wrote in the book of pinghuai in historical records: "therefore, the princes of Wu also cast money with their counties and mountains to enrich the emperor."
Analysis of Idioms
Rich is the enemy of the country, rich is the world
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, object; description is very rich. In Gao Yang's complete biography of Hu Xueyan, the smoke disappears and the clouds dissipate: "he has always held a deep prejudice on Hu Xueyan's daily life."
Prince Fulong
gentleness can over come stength - róu néng zhì gāng
Rub one's hands and sharpen one's fists - cā zhǎng mó quán
Once the power is in hand, the order will be executed - yī zhāo quán zài shǒu,biàn bǎ lìng lái xí
destroy the old and establish the new - pò jiù lì xīn
with one 's face flushed and one 's ears hot - miàn hóng ěr rè