Haohao, a China idiom, pinyin is hà o rú yā n h m: i, which describes the richness of ancient books. From Guan Zhen's Dream Fu in Sui Dynasty.
"Vast sea of smoke" comes from Song Sima Guang's "Jin (Zi Jian) Table": "Reading old history, collecting novels by the side, concise and accumulated, so it is vast." It means vast and numerous, like a huge ocean, which describes extremely rich documents and materials.
For example, the biography of Dai Dunyuan in Qing Dynasty: "There are so many books that you can't finish reading them all your life." Zhao Jiabi's Editor's Memories: "Since the May 4th Movement, the literary works translated and introduced from abroad are really vast." A poem by Huineng and monk Qin Mu: "Is it accidental that it spreads in a vast collection of ballads?"
The usage scope of this idiom is established, but now someone has improperly expanded it. For example:
(1) It is a headache to choose eight new cars among the vast number of new cars on display (Guangzhou Daily 2008 165438+ 10/7).
(2) Nanjing's vast former residence of celebrities is a rare business card of this ancient city (Jiangnan Daily, March 5, 2009).
(3) There are countless calligraphers who have written "Dragon", but they can write 100 1 dragon in simplified Chinese characters from Oracle Bone Inscriptions. Meng Fanshui said that it is "unprecedented" (People's Daily Overseas Edition, May 26, 2009).
(4) Journalists have strong news sensitivity, and can find and capture news-worthy facts in time among complicated facts (People's Daily Online, August 2008 1 1).
(5) In recent years, different people have different opinions, and the views expressed by various heroes are also vast (People's Daily Online, April 22, 2009).