To meet with guests
As a Chinese word, the Pinyin is j à Li ú Qi à K è, which means a person who is highly refined and widely known.
The origin of Idioms
In the book Shaoshi Shanfang bicong · Jingji Huitong 4 written by Hu Yinglin of Ming Dynasty, it is said that "it's just like a strange person who talks with others, who leads the difference and pulls out the new, and there's a series that people haven't seen."
Idiom usage
As an object; of a learned person
To meet with guests
There is no tile on the top and no place under it - shàng wú piàn wǎ,xià wú lì zhuī zhī dì
Promoting the good and dethroning the evil - jìn xián chù è
The enemy's country is in the boat - dí guó tōng zhōu
Dare not cross the thunder pool - bù gǎn yuè léi chí yī bù