Strike gold and stone
Beating the gold and striking the stone is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Qi ā OJ ī NJ ī sh í, which means playing musical instruments such as bells and chimes. It also describes sonorous sound. It comes from Dai Zhang Ji and Li Zhedong Shu by Han Yu of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in poetry, voice, etc
Analysis of Idioms
Knock on gold and knock on jade
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's Dai Zhang Ji and Li Zhedong Shu in Tang Dynasty said, "you should listen to it according to the number. It's not necessarily better to listen to the beating of gold and stone."
Idiom explanation
Gold and stone: musical instruments such as bells and chimes. Playing instruments such as bells and chimes. It also describes a sonorous voice.
Strike gold and stone
atone for one 's crimes by doing good deeds - dài zuì lì gōng
join closely together like the teeth of a comb or the scales of a fish - zhì bǐ lín cǐ
smash a pot to pieces just because it 's cracked -- write oneself off as hopeless and act recklessly - pò guàn pò shuāi
It's like participating in business - dòng rú cān shāng