Zhufengxiangluan
Zhufengxiangluan, a Chinese idiom, is spelled as "zhaf è ngxi á nglu á n", which means the Phoenix hovering and flying. It often refers to beautiful dancing. It's from the story of Huansha - performing dance.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Chenyu's HuanShaJi Yanwu in Ming Dynasty: "dance leads people to be stagnant, so the spring breeze starts from the banquet, and the night gathers at the top of the building. In ancient times, there are zhufengxiangluan, lingering in the dust, gathering feathers, bending waist and raising sleeves." Jichu "and" yanga "all have to pitch and respond to the sound, and suppress the festival."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of dancing.
Zhufengxiangluan
adopt a wrong method to save a situation and end up by making it worse - bào xīn jiù fén
When enemies meet, they are especially open-minded - chóu rén xiāng jiàn ,fèn wài yǎn zhēng
To suspend troops according to the law - àn jiǎ xiū bīng