The dragonfly
Longzhuqu is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is l ó ngxi ā nghu ò Q ū, which means to bend and stretch at any time. It comes from Liu xiaobiao.
The origin of Idioms
Liu xiaobiao in Wenxuan: "the sage holds the golden mirror, the wind is strong, the dragon is weak, and the Tao is dirty."
Idiom usage
Example: Li Shanzhu: "Ban Gu's Hanshu · hanpeng says:" the cloud rises and the dragon becomes the king. " The book of changes says, "the inchworm bends in order to stretch." Lu Yanji's note: "the sage holds the way, opens the wind and leaves, ascends like a dragon, bends like an inchworm, and kills at any time."
The dragonfly
Turn over the yellow and pour out the soap - fān huáng dǎo zào