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Rare meaning and usage

Phoenix feathers, unicorn horns. Metaphor is precious and rare people or things.

Idiom origin: Liu Yiqing's "Shi Shuo Xin Yu Rong Zhi" in the Southern Dynasties: "Big slaves have their own phoenix feathers." "The Biography of Xie Chaozong in Southern History": "Chaozong has its own feathers." Preface to the Biography of Northern History and Wenyuan: "Scholars are like cows' hair, and winners are like horns."

Idiom Example: You are the only one admitted to the county, which is rare in any case.

traditional writing: the angle of a phoenix feather

phonetic notation: ㄈㄥˋㄇㄠˊㄌㄧㄣˊㄐㄧㄠ? < Bend over and pick it up to get it. Many words are easy to get. Tang Sikong's "Twenty-four Seasons Nature": "There are so many hairs on the cows that no one can count them. Metaphor is very much more than since, the new laws and regulations have been issued, a dime a dozen. Qing? Liang Qichao's idiom grammar on capital

: joint style; As an object and attribute;

Degree of usage: common idiom

Emotion. Color: neutral idiom

Idiom structure: joint idiom

Generation year: ancient idiom

English translation: Phoenix feathers and unicorn's horn; Rare and precious things

Russian translation: уникум

Japanese translation: extremely rare things. De > sehr seltener und wertvoller gegenstand< Law > Chose rare et précieuse

Idiom riddle: the rarest thing

Note: Feng, you can't write "wind"; Lin, cannot write "scale" or "phosphorus"; Angle, can't write "feet".