faraway
Haibei Tiannan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǎ IB ě ITI ā NN á n, which means to describe the distance of thousands of miles. It also describes different regions. It comes from "farewell 46 songs · Luo Zhong meets Han Qizhong Cheng's five slogans of Wu Xing".
H ǎ IB ě ITI ā NN á n) source: Liu Yuxi of Tang Dynasty, 46 farewell poems, five slogans of Wu Xing of Luo Zhong meeting Han Zhong and Qi Zhong Cheng: "in the past years, I had a lot of good spirits, and several times I went back to China.". The north and the south are scattered, and they meet in Luoyang City. " example: ~ each by himself, no fish and no geese. In Song Dynasty, Shi Puji's wudenghuiyuan · wendeyan Zen master FASI, the meaning is close to the ends of the earth, and the opposite meaning is close at hand
faraway
Beat ducks to scare mandarin ducks - dǎ yā jīng yuān yāng
cook the crane for meat and burn a stringed instrument for fuel -- destroy sth. valuable or fine - zhǔ hè shāo qín
from abundance back to limitation - yóu bó fǎn yuē