Pinyin: bà wáng bié jī:?
Explanation: Ji: refers to Yu Ji, the favorite concubine of Xiang Yu, the overlord of the western Chu Dynasty. A tragic scene that describes the protagonist's ending. Now it's more like being arbitrary, divorced from the masses and eventually collapsing.
Origin: Records of Historical Records of Xiang Yu records that overlord Xiang Yu was finally defeated in the war with Liu Bang to seize feudal sovereignty, and he knew that the general trend had gone and had to bid farewell to Kyrgyzstan on the eve of the breakthrough.
2. Idiom: Buyi Xiongshi
Pinyin: büy Xióng shì √.
Explanation: Buyi people: civilians. An ordinary person becomes a world hero.
Source: Song Ye Ting-Jue's "Hai Lu Broken Personnel Sensitivity": "Yuan Shao said that Zheng Xuan was named after clothes."
3. Idiom: Children's Heroes
Pinyin: ér nǐy and ng xi languages.
Explanation: refers to a young and capable hero with rich feelings.
Origin: The first origin of Qing Wenkang's Biography of Heroes of Children: "Nine Wan Li, up and down for five thousand years, seeking heroes of children. I have both, I only see two. "
4. Idiom: Flying dragons ride clouds.
Pinyin: füI lóng chéng yún
Explanation: the dragon rides the cloud to heaven, which is a metaphor for the hero who took the opportunity to seize power
Source: Han Fei, during the Warring States Period, Han Fei's "The Trouble of Han Feizi": "Flying dragons ride clouds, making snakes swim in the fog ... those who can swim with cloud potential, dragons and snakes are also beautiful."
5. Idiom: Human Heroes
Pinyin: gàI shy ng Xióng Xióng
Explanation: Rage: Overwhelms the present world. Beyond all contemporaries. Used to describe a very outstanding hero.
Source: Yuan Yiming's "Maling Road" is the first discount: "Heroes in the world, driving troops and the public."