have mutual affinity
Yilingxi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī di ǎ NL í NGX ī, which means that there are lines on the horn of the rhinoceros, and the two ends are telepathic, so it is a metaphor of heart to heart; it refers to intelligence. From untitled.
The origin of Idioms
In Tang Dynasty, Li Shangyin's Untitled poem: "the body has no colorful Phoenix and wings, and the heart has a sense of intelligence."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. example across the 100 foot long whale, each pair flies colorful Phoenix, pass ~. In Yuan Dynasty, Wang Yuanheng's "the order of returning to seclusion" and in Tang Dynasty, Li Shangyin's "Untitled" poem is one of: "the body has no colorful Phoenix wings, and the heart has a sense of intelligence." In the Song Dynasty, Zhang Xiaoxiang's poem "Magnolia flower with reduced characters" reads: "the jade is graceful and graceful, and a little bit of spirit is sent to the eyes." The fourth fold of Zheng Guangzu's Qian Nu Li Hun in Yuan Dynasty: "if you don't have a hidden soul, it's like having a body." Wang Yufeng of Ming Dynasty wrote the pledge of burning incense: "however, both of them are satisfied, so they are called" two emotions ". I believe in the sea god from the beginning
have mutual affinity
the mountains are high and the water wide - shān yáo lù yuǎn