Ming Ke Qiang Yu
Ming Ke Qiang Yu is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is m í NGK ē Qi ā ngy ù, which means that Yu Ke rings and Pei Yu is sonorous. It is a metaphor for dignitaries. It comes from "mianshui Yan Tan Lu · omen".
The origin of Idioms
Wang Bizhi of the Song Dynasty wrote in the record of mianshui Yantan · omen: "seeking for the Lord, worshiping the emperor's son-in-law, being a Duwei, singing a clang jade, forbidding entering and leaving, ranking first in Liangtian, playing with treasures, and being luxurious and rich, it was the first time."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Ming Ke Qiang Yu
love the subjects as if they were his own children - ài mín rú zǐ
adopt a wrong method to save a situation and end up by making it worse - bào xīn jiù fén
meaning grasped imageries forgotten - dé yì wàng xiàng
Pay attention to both gold and purple - chóng jīn jiān zǐ
make up a deficiency by the surplus - jué cháng jì duǎn