What is high and what is intense?

Exuberant.

It is an idiom. The allusion related to the idiom first came from "Literary Mind and Diaolong·Ti Xing" by Liu Xie of Liang Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty. The original meaning of "joyfully" refers to the superb purpose of the article and the sharp and sharp diction. , to describe someone who is full of interest and enthusiastic. It can serve as a predicate, attributive, and adverbial in a sentence, and has a commendatory meaning.

The meaning of the idiom: People will only appear happy when they encounter something particularly happy. It is often said that particularly happy things will not always happen to people. However, the positive and optimistic mentality corresponding to "emotion" is very important for people to be able to maintain a positive and optimistic mentality at all times.

Written usage: "Exuberantly" can serve as a predicate, attributive, and adverbial in a sentence. It mostly describes high interest, full of energy, and has a commendatory meaning.

Idiom Story

Ji Kang, one of the "Seven Sages of the Bamboo Grove" in the Wei and Jin Dynasties, was handsome and talented in literature. Many people admired him at that time. Ji Kang wrote many poems and essays throughout his life, in which he repeatedly mentioned the dangers of the environment. "When birds are exhausted, their bows are hidden, and their minds and bodies are in danger. Although good or bad luck lies with them, the world is full of dangers." These poems ruthlessly exposed and criticized the reality at that time. His papers have clear views, concentrated arguments, strong argumentative power, and are full of exposure to the society at that time and criticism of etiquette scholars.

For example, in "On Health Preservation", he advocated "purity, tranquility, less selfishness and few desires", and criticized the gentry people for living a life of indulgence in "sensuality and sex", especially for those who wanted to live longer and wanted to live longer. The psychological portrayal of people who want to enjoy themselves is particularly wonderful. He said that this kind of people "are afraid of gaining when they want, fear losing when they gain, and are afraid of losing when they don't get it. How can you not be arrogant in gaining, how can you not be overflowing when you are full, how can you not be stubborn in seeking, and get it Why gain without losing?”

This is how Ji Kang clearly explained and vividly portrayed the extremely greedy and abnormal psychology of the scholar-bureaucrats in the Wei and Jin Dynasties, which was caused by the urgent accumulation of gains and losses and the uncertainty of life and death. Because of this, Liu Xie, a literary theorist of Liang Dynasty in the Southern Dynasties, wrote in "The Literary Mind and the Carving of Dragons" that "Uncle Ye is a handsome man, so he is cheerful and cheerful", which means that Ji Kang's character is heroic and heroic, so his articles have noble aspirations. , the writing is sharp.

Reference for the above content: Baidu Encyclopedia - Joyfully