Three rivers and seven rivers
Sanjiang Qize, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NJI ā ngq ī Z é, meaning rivers and lakes. From "Dangtu Shaoyan powder painting landscape song".
The origin of Idioms
In Tang Dynasty, Li Bai's "song of mountains and waters in Shaofu of Dangtu and Zhaoyan", it is said that "Dongting Xiaoxiang has a long history, and three rivers and seven rivers are moving along."
Analysis of Idioms
Three rivers and five lakes
Idiom usage
Used as a subject or object; used in writing.
Examples
Lu You's Shuhuai jueju in Song Dynasty said, "before driving qingluan back to the emperor's hometown, there is a vast road of three rivers and seven rivers."
Three rivers and seven rivers
show oneself in one's true colors - yuán xíng bì lù
Tiger crouching and dragon leaping - hǔ wò lóng tiào
wind that carries sand and drives stones - fēi shē zǒu lì