The Dragon roars and the lion roars
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is l ó NGM í ngsh ī h ǒ u, which means a metaphor for a gloomy and majestic voice. It comes from a new account of the world.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing's Shishuoxinyu in the Southern Dynasty said, "Prince Qiao's tomb is in the mausoleum of Beijing. When the country was in chaos, someone stole it. There was nothing to see. There was only a sword hanging in the air. If you wanted to take it, the sword would be a dragon roaring and a tiger roaring."
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor for a gloomy and majestic voice. Chen Shiyi's "drunken song" says: "the chanting of chanting and Sanskrit singing is mixed, and it will last for a moment." "the Buddhist Scripture of VIMA:" the performance is fearless, just like the roar of a lion. What he said is like a thunderbolt. "
The Dragon roars and the lion roars
beauty shown to the best advantage - jìn tài jí yán
the battle of chibi in ancient times - chì bì áo bīng