Zhu xiansan sighs
Zhu Xian San Tan, a Chinese idiom, is a Chinese phonetic alphabet, which refers to the beauty of music. From the book of rites, music.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, Yue Ji: "the Sutras in the temple of the Qing Dynasty, Zhu Xian and Shu Yue, one advocate and three sighs, have left a sound." Later, he referred to the beauty of music as "Zhu Xian San Tan".
Word usage
Used as an object; used in writing. In the Qing Dynasty, Zha Shenxing wrote the poem "to send Chen Zezhou to report his return to the prime minister": "the flowing water is really out of tune when it is played, and there is a lingering sound when it is sighed three times."
Zhu xiansan sighs
shut one 's door and reflect on one 's misdeeds - bì gé sī guò
display only a small part of one 's talent - xiǎo shì fēng máng
An egg strikes against a stone. —overestimate one's strength - luǎn yǔ shí dòu