Dragon and monkey
Tu Long Mu Hou is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is t ǔ L ó NGM ù h ó u, which means that it has no real name but no real name. It comes from the sacred stele of Li Gong, the posthumous posthumous official of the Imperial Guard of Zhu state, which was presented by zuodu, the censor of duchayuan, as a gift to tejin Guanglu
The origin of Idioms
Qian Qianyi, the Qing Dynasty, wrote "the monument to the God of Li Gong, the posthumous posthumous posthumous book of the official Department of the Imperial Guard of the state of Zhu, which was given by the censor of zuodou in the duzha yuan:" the common people in the time advertised the door, pursued the sound and profit, thought that the local dragon and the monkey were not built up by themselves, and despised it. "
Analysis of Idioms
Local chicken and tile dog
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Dragon and monkey
house of courtesans with wining and dining - qín lóu chǔ guǎn
Tiger crouching and dragon leaping - hǔ wò lóng tiào
a place where all kinds of people live - wǔ fāng zá cuò