Dead fish and sick crane
Dead fish and sick crane, a Chinese idiom, pronounced K ū y ú B ì NGH è, refers to a person who is in a difficult situation and is not met. It's from Qun Yin Lei Xuan, jade hairpin, bizheng Tougu.
Idiom explanation
Explanation: dry fish, sick crane.
Idioms and allusions
Source: Ming Dynasty Hu Wenhuan's "Qun Yin Lei Xuan · jade hairpin Ji · bizheng Tougu": "like dead fish and sick crane, dead fish and sick crane, empty Xiaohan, next to hanjimaodian."
Discrimination of words
Idiom structure: combination generation time: ancient times
Dead fish and sick crane
Meet each other in a narrow way - xiāng féng xiá lù
be helpless and in the greatest straits - jì qióng zhì jí