Yuanpenglilian
Yuanzhen Lilian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu á NCH ǎ IL ǐ L á n, which originally refers to the grass on both sides of Yuanli river. Later it is used to refer to noble people or things, the same as Yuanzhi Lilian. From the songs of Chu, nine songs, lady Xiang.
Idiom explanation
Zhi, a book for "Peng.". Li, a book for Li.
The origin of Idioms
"There are Zhi in Yuan and LAN in Li" in the nine songs of Chu Wang Yi's note: "it's different from grass that there is a flourishing Zhi in Yuan River and a fragrant orchid in Li River.".
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. Yuan Zhi Li Lan Sao Ke Yuan, Zhu Qiao Fen Guo Jiu Ren Shu. Jin Nong's poem to Huang Chushi in Yuezhou in Qing Dynasty
Yuanpenglilian
a scene of desolation after a plague when the population is decimated - shí shì jiǔ kōng
marriages of one 's sons and daughters - xiàng píng zhī yuán
flee far away in getting wind of sth. - wén fēng yuǎn yáng