Love between dog and horse
Love between a dog and a horse, a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Qu ǎ nm ǎ zh ī Li à n, which means that the courtiers are attached to the emperor. It comes from the poem list of shangzhigong Yingzhao.
The origin of Idioms
"Looking at the opposite side, I can't help but love my master."
Idiom usage
Be an object; be a metaphor for loyalty.
Examples
Pan Yue, Jin Dynasty, wrote in his ode to the Western Expedition: "in the peace of every man, Miao devoted himself to Ho Jing. You are still in love with the Lord, and you are in love with him. "
Liu yuhou of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the table of Xie Shangbiao, the governor of Suzhou: "although the grace of rain and dew, you Ya will be loved, and it's proud to be close."
Love between dog and horse
Fire the dragon and cook the Phoenix - pào lóng pēng fèng
heart startled and gallbladder broken -- extremely frightened - jīng xīn dào dǎn