Zhen Qi Lu Yi
Zhen Qi Lu Yi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ē NQ í L ù y ì, which means to select and employ excellent talents. It comes from the biography of the Three Kingdoms, Wu Zhi and bu Jia.
Idiom explanation
Phonetic notation: select, select; record, admit and employ.
Idioms and allusions
Source: biography of Bu in Wu annals of the Three Kingdoms Li Su, Zhou Tiao and Shi Gan, 11 people, screened shapes. " Example: Pei Songzhi's annotation quoted Wu Shu written by Wu Weizhao of the Three Kingdoms as "good at argumentation, good at Zang's success or not, good at distinguishing between strange things and different things, poor in recommendation and narration, good in title, and well-organized in music, which is widely accepted."
Discrimination of words
Usage: used as predicate and attribute; used in writing. emotional color: commendatory words idiom structure: combined degree of common use: rare
Zhen Qi Lu Yi
The head of a donkey is not the mouth of a horse - lǘ tóu bù duì mǎ zuǐ