Pan Lin Ge Yin
Pan Lin Ge Yin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p à NL í ng é y à n, which means changing old habits under good influence. It comes from poem · Luzong · Panshui.
The origin of Idioms
"Poem · Lu Song · Pan Shui": "flying owls gather in Pan Lin, eat my mulberry and bear my good voice." Zheng xuanjian: "the owl is always singing evil. Now it stops on the trees of Panshui and feeds on its mulberry. For this reason, it is necessary to change its sound and return it to me. It's a metaphor for people's feeling of kindness
Idiom usage
From top to bottom, it is faster than sending mail. Preface to the collection of giving Sikong Linghu the same gift in Tang Dynasty by Liu Yuxi
Pan Lin Ge Yin
sing with solemn fervour to express one 's feeling of oppression - bēi gē kāng kǎi
Rootless wood, water without source - wú gēn zhī mù,wú yuán zhī shuǐ
be beyond one 's capacity one 's depth - lì bù néng jí
a thousand things wait to be done - bǎi fèi dài xīng
a harmonious union lasting a hundred years - bǎi nián hǎo hé
Twisting the earth to burn incense - niǎn tǔ fén xiāng