one 's name in literature is becoming famous
Tengjiaoqifeng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t é ngji ā OQ ǐ f è ng, which means like a dragon leaping and a phoenix dancing. It describes a large number of talents, each showing his own ability. From preface to Tengwang Pavilion.
Notes on Idioms
Jiao: Jiaolong; Feng: Fenghuang.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Bo's preface to Tengwang Pavilion in Tang Dynasty: "Tengjiao Qifeng is the school of Ci of Meng Xuexue."
Idiom usage
A person with great literary talent. Example: miscellaneous records of Xijing: "Dong Zhongshu's dream of the dragon in his heart is his work Chunqiu Fanlu." "Yang Xiong wrote taixuanjing, and his dream was on the top of Fenghuang's collection of xuanjing, which disappeared in an instant." look at this autumn, with the coming of spring. Feng Weimin, Ming Dynasty
one 's name in literature is becoming famous
Great achievements and great virtues - fēng gōng shuò dé
a man of no common appearance and very noble in his looks - yī biǎo fēi sú
it is hard to change one 's nature - běn xìng nán yí
Fengnian yuhuangnian Valley - fēng nián yù huāng nián gǔ
splits off as it meets the edge of knife without effort - yìng rèn ér jiě