Lonely couple
Lonely couple, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ū ch ó ugu ǎ P ǐ, meaning lonely without a partner. It's from Shen Jing's "a tale of two pearls, another idea of joining the army" in Ming Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: solitary
The origin of Idioms
Shen Jing, Ming Dynasty, wrote in "a tale of two pearls, a farewell to the Army:" I beg for sympathy on the way; I want to leave my hometown alone. "
Idiom explanation
Lonely without a partner.
Lonely couple
One man is good at shooting, but a hundred men are good at shooting - yī rén shàn shè,bǎi fū jué shí
as timid as a rat which peeps out its head and dares to do nothing - shǔ shǒu fèn shì
Beautiful in the morning and evening - zhāo huá xī xiù
Build a plank road in the open - míng xiū zhàn dào,àn dù chén cāng
The falling flowers are intentional and the flowing water is merciless - luò huā yǒu yì,liú shuǐ wú qíng