deep-rooted love for natural charms
Quan Shi Gao Huang is a Chinese idiom, and its pinyin is Qu á NSH í g ā Ohu ā ng. It comes from the biography of Tian Youyan in the new book of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Tianyouyan biography of the new Tang Dynasty:" the minister said that the spring and stone are blind, and the haze is a solid disease. "
Idiom usage
It is used as an object; it is used as a metaphor to describe one's addiction to mountains and rivers. Song · Hu Jizong's Shuyan story · seclusion
Idioms and allusions
During the Tang Dynasty, when Emperor Gaozong visited Mount Song, hermit Tian Youyan went to visit him. Tang Gaozong then asked Tian Youyan, "does it feel good for you to raise Taoism in this mountain?" Tian Youyan replied: "I like the natural landscape of mountains, forests, springs, water and stones very much, and I'm addicted to them. So I feel very free. “
deep-rooted love for natural charms
entertain imaginary or groundless fears - qǐ rén yōu tiān
changes arise from the elbow and armpit . 2 . confusion starts from one 's side or friends - shì shēng zhǒu yè
Reward the same and punish the different - shǎng tóng fá yì
To break a wall and destroy a stone - pò bì huǐ zhǐ