The idioms of Yu include Qionglou Yuyu, Qiyu Xuanang, Wangheng Duiyu, Yuyu Qionglou, Qiyu Xuanang, Junyu carved wall, carved wall Junyu, Yuliang Shenguang, Zizhi Meiyu, Junyu Diao The wall clears the world, clears the whole area, sweeps the inner world, brings joy to the brows, is extraordinary, shocks the world, Hongyu worships the building, is extraordinary, is majestic, has a sound that shakes the world, encompasses the whole world, is extraordinary , Zhaozhao's universe, opening up the territory and expanding the universe, clarifying the universe, flying over the eaves to reverse the universe, swallowing the universe with energy.
1. Qionglou Yuyu is a Chinese idiom, pronounced qióng lóu yù yǔ, which refers to the palace in the moon and the tower in the fairy world. Also describes magnificent buildings. From "The Supplementary Notes".
2. Magnificent and majestic, a Chinese idiom whose pinyin is qì yǔ xuān áng. Qiyu: magnanimity, magnanimity; Xuanang: full of energy and extraordinary appearance. It mostly describes being full of energy and extraordinary spirit. It can also describe plants that are tall and straight, full of vigor and vitality. From "Tiewei Shan Cong Tan".
3. Wangheng duiyu, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is wàng héng duì yǔ, which means that people who live close to each other can see each other. It comes from "Shui Jing Zhu·Mianshui" written by Li Daoyuan in the Northern Wei Dynasty.
4. Yuyu Qionglou, a Chinese idiom whose pinyin is yù yǔ qióng lóu, means the palace where immortals live in mythology and describes a snow-covered building. From "Niannujiao·Looking into the distance from a high position".
5. Qi Yu Xuanang (qì yǔ xuān áng) is an idiom, which first came from "The Romance of the Three Kingdoms" written by Luo Guanzhong in the Ming Dynasty. This idiom refers to the high-spirited and open-minded demeanor, describing the appearance of being full of energy and extraordinary bearing; it can be used as a predicate, attributive, and adverbial in the sentence.