A crane in a cage
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji à nhu à L ó NGH è, which means constrained people or things. It's from Gong Zizhen's "good things are near. There is a picture in the suitcase praising Ci".
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of a bound person or thing
Analysis of Idioms
Bird in cage
The origin of Idioms
In Gong Zizhen's "a good thing is near, a picture in a suitcase praises words:" if you were born in Hou's family, the will of heaven would turn to loneliness. How can you laugh like this when you are a crane in a cage
Idiom explanation
Flowers in the fence, cranes in the cage. A person or thing that is bound.
A crane in a cage
Repaying a grievance with a straight line - yǐ zhí bào yuàn
the nearest to the flames is the first burned - jìn huǒ xiān jiāo
spread rumours to create trouble - zào yán shēng shì
We can't talk about the ugly family - jiā chǒu bù kě wài tán