Six out of six
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li ù ch ū f ē NF ē I, meaning heavy snow. From Han Shi waizhuan.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. When it snows heavily on New Year's day, Li Min flies in all directions. The branches on the top of the tree are like jade. The Bank of the terrace is like a pile of silver. In the middle of it, you can see the palace of Qiong. Chapter 30 of the history of Gongwei in Song Dynasty by Xu Muyi.
The origin of Idioms
In Han Ying's Han Shi waizhuan, there are five flowers and six snowflakes
Analysis of Idioms
Rhyme words: the combination of brilliance, neither overbearing nor inferiority, the downfall of trees and roots, the arch of trees and trees, taking advantage of people's danger, bowing to the command, louse's head and black, deafness and black eyes, left to right, drowning and subtle
Six out of six
disciples and students of a master - táo lǐ mén qiáng
The prime minister comes from the East and the general comes from the West - guēn dōng chū xiàng,guān xī chū jiàng
Discard the short and use the long - qì duǎn yòng cháng