Gold and jade
Keng Jin Jia Yu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ē NGJ ī NJI á y ù, which means that the syllables of adjectives are sonorous and powerful. It comes from the book shadow written by Zhou Lianggong in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: the gold and the jade
[Pinyin]: K ē NGJ ī NJI á y ù
Explanation: the syllables of adjectives are sonorous and powerful.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: the first volume of Book Shadow written by Zhou Lianggong in the Qing Dynasty: "when I first changed, I got up alone and left and right in the north. I have made great achievements in the field of CI until now."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: kjjy
Keng Jinfei Yu
Degree of common use: rare
Emotional color: commendatory words
Grammatical usage: as predicate, attribute; refers to the text, etc
Idiom structure: United
Time of emergence: Modern Times
Gold and jade
can 't tell how many there are -- numerous similar cases - bù zhī fán jǐ
the meat-eaters are vulgar -- the noblemen are shortsighted and good-for-nothing - ròu shí zhě bǐ
be prepared for danger in times of peace - yú ān sī wēi