Yuanzhi Xianglan
Yuanzhi Xianglan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu á nzh ǐ Xi ā NGL á n, meaning originally refers to the grass on both sides of Yuanxiang, later used to refer to noble people or things. It's from the work of paying teacher Zou.
The origin of Idioms
In Qing Dynasty, Fang Wen wrote a poem, "Yuanzhi Xianglan was heard in the past, ten years later, it began to gouqunfen."
Analysis of Idioms
Yuan Zhi Li Lan
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. "There are Zhi in Yuan Dynasty and LAN in Li Dynasty" in "Nine Songs of Chu" Wang Yi's note: "it's different from grass that there are shengmaozhi in Yuan River and fragrant orchid in Li River.".
Yuanzhi Xianglan
sit facing each other in silence - xiāng duì wú yán