Data expansion:
Fè ng c m 4 I Lu á n zhā ng, an idiom in China, is pronounced as fè ng c m4i Lu á n zhā ng, which means to describe the gorgeous literary talent of poetry. From Qi Xie Jingling Wang Yongming's Music Songs: "Luan Zhang, Xia Jian."
Introduction to China idioms:
Chinese idioms (pinyin: Chinese yǔ chénɡ yǔ) are fixed phrases formed by long-term use and tempering in Chinese. Originated from ancient classics, famous historical stories or people's oral expressions, the meaning is incisive and often implied in the literal meaning, which is not a simple addition of the meanings of its components, but a meaningful integrity. Its structure is tight, so it is generally impossible to change the word order at will, extract or increase or decrease the components in it, and it has the solidification of the structure.
From the fable:
Fable is a story with exhortation or irony in the form of prose or verse. It often illustrates a truth through the personification of stories or natural objects. Fables are educational, persuasive and ironic. For example, the idiom "Dong Shi is effective" is a fable in Zhuangzi Tian Yun. It tells the story that Dong Shi failed to imitate Xi Shi, but was spurned by others. It satirizes random imitation and advises people not to imitate blindly.
The idiom "Waiting for a Rabbit" is a fable from Everything happens for a reason. It tells the story of an ancient farmer who saw a rabbit hit a tree root and died. From then on, he put down his hoe and waited for the rabbit killed by the roots every day, satirizing those who want to succeed without hard work.
Originated from myths and legends:
Myths and legends are often stories of ancient heroes, stories of ancient people's interpretation and imagination of natural phenomena and culture. Myths prevailed in ancient times, that is, the Five Emperors period, during which many myths were born. For example, the idiom "Jingwei fills the sea" comes from a myth and legend in the ancient book "Shan Hai Jing Bei Shan Jing" in the pre-Qin period, which tells that in ancient times, Yan Di's daughter Jingwei went to visit the East China Sea and was killed by a storm raid.
Later, Jingwei went to Xishan to get stones and branches and threw them into the sea again and again, trying to fill up the East China Sea. China people use this idiom to describe persistent struggle to the end according to the set goals. The idiom "creating the world" comes from the myth and legend in March 5 written by Xú Zhēng of the State of Wu in the Three Kingdoms period. It tells the story of Pangu's creation in ancient times, which is often used as a metaphor for an unprecedented phenomenon that has never happened since ancient times.
The idiom "immaculate" comes from a fairy tale in The Han Dynasty written by Shu Niuqiao five generations ago. It originally refers to the celestial clothes worn by fairies in mythology, which are sewn without needle and thread and have no seams. Now the metaphor is that things are perfect and natural, without any traces or flaws. There are many such idioms.