Yue Zhenyuan
Yue zhenyuanhe, a Chinese idiom, is Yu è zh è NYU ā NT ī ng in pinyin, which means standing like mountains and stagnating like rivers. This is used to describe the stability and unshakability of the army. The latter is often used to describe a person's firmness and composure. It comes from Wang Rong's preface to Qushui poems on March 3.
Analysis of Idioms
Yue Zhiyuan
The origin of Idioms
In Wang Rong's preface to Qushui poems on March 3, Wenxuan: "Er Nai, Huiyu, zhuhan, Yue Zhenyuan." Li Shanzhu: "the art of war of Sun Tzu says:" its town is like a mountain, its pit is like a deep. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Yue Zhenyuan
fight criminal offenders by death penalty - yǐ shā qù shā
big in stature and eminent in virtue without comparison - shuò dà wú péng
To swallow the boat and miss the net - tūn zhōu lòu wǎng
dew in spring and frost in autumn - chūn lù qiū shuāng