sworn brothers
Jinlanzhiqi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin J is ī NL á nzh ī Q ì, which means a friend who has a close relationship. It comes from the book of changes.
The origin of Idioms
In Xianyuan, a new account of the world, written by Liu Yiqing in the Southern Dynasty of Song Dynasty, "Shangong and Ji Ruan are on the same side, just like Jinlan."
Idiom usage
In Song Dynasty, Zhang Xiaoxiang's xiadingshu: "when you travel in the gate, you can trust the agreement between Jin and LAN as early as possible; when you are dressed in beautiful clothes, you are known as the sage of ice and jade."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: friend in need, friend in need
sworn brothers
be contented in poverty and devoted to things spiritual - gān pín lè dào
To throw oneself into difficulties - wěi zhòng tóu jiān