Long Yin and Hu Xiao's explanation.

The elephant dragon is singing and the tiger is whistling. Metaphor refers to the mutual induction of related things. It also describes the prosperity of people. The origin of the idiom: Heng's "Returning to Tianfu": "The second wife is a mountain."

Examples of idioms: dragons sing and tigers roar, cranes roar and warblers sing.

Traditional writing: dragon and tiger.

ㄨㄙㄧㄣㄨˇㄒㄧˋ Athena Chu.

The pronoun of "Long Yin Hu Xiao": The sound resounding through the sky is very loud and can reach high altitude. The sound resounding through the sky was deafening. The sound of firecrackers is deafening, almost deafening.

The antonym of dragon and tiger roar: infinity is connected like a thin thread, which is extremely critical. It is still described that the voice is subtle and continuous, or that people have gone over the mountains and the songs are still there.

Idiom grammar: combination; As an attribute or adverbial; Refers to a loud noise.

Degree of common use: common idioms

Emotion and color: neutral idioms

Idiom structure: combined idioms

Generation time: ancient idioms

Chinese translation: the sound of dragons and tigers

Pronunciation note: small, you can't pronounce "xiāo".

Note: You can't write "Ling" on the right part of Yin.