Very niche but amazing idioms

Very niche but amazing idioms are as follows:

Flowers in the morning and moonlight in the evening, claws in the snow and mud, bright eyes and white teeth, washing stones and pillows, lifting and respecting, gulls and birds forgetting Machine, sinking fish and wild geese, moon and stars sinking, ocean forest and leather sound, moon shy flowers, falling rabbit taking light, floating green and flowing elixir, flowing gold and stone, warm and fragrant jade, pillow on the mountain and lapped by the sea, pearls and brocade beams, pale green Young man, with flowers and moon appearance, bright pearls and hibiscus, and cold awns and bright color.

Data expansion:

Idioms (Pinyin: chéng yǔ, English: idiom) are stereotyped words in Chinese vocabulary. Idioms are spoken by everyone, and they are made into words, so they are idioms. Most idioms have four characters, but there are also three, five or even seven or more characters.

Idioms are a major feature of traditional Chinese culture. They have fixed structural forms and fixed sayings, expressing a certain meaning. They are used as a whole in a sentence and bear the responsibilities of subject, object, attributive, etc. Element.

A large part of idioms are inherited from ancient times and represent a story or allusion. Some idioms are just miniature sentences. Idioms are also ready-made words, similar to idiomatic expressions and proverbs, but also slightly different.

There are more than 50,000 idioms, 96% of which are in four-character format, and there are also idioms with three, five, six, and seven characters or more. Such as "fifty steps lead to a hundred steps", "closed door", "unnecessary", "haste makes waste", "drunkard's intention is not wine", etc. Idioms generally use four characters, probably because four characters are easy to pronounce.

For example, the ancient Chinese poetry collection "The Book of Songs" mostly contains four-character sentences, and the ancient history "Shangshu" also has some four-character sentences. Later I learned to read three, one hundred and one thousand: "Three Character Classic", "Hundred Family Surnames" and "Thousand Character Classic", the latter two of which are all four-character sentences. The first, second and third episodes of "Four-character Miscellaneous Characters" and "Longwen Whip Shadow" are all four-character.

Although this is a book of instruction, it is enough to show that the four-character sentence is loved and recited by people. Some words from the ancients were originally worthy of aphorisms and could become idioms. Just because changing it to four characters was more troublesome, I had to abandon it and use it as a guide.

For example, "The Story of Yueyang Tower" written by Fan Zhongyan of the Song Dynasty contains the phrase "Be worried about the world's worries first, and be happy after the world's happiness." If it can form an idiom, we can only regard it as an aphorism, and sometimes it can be introduced into an article.