Can be like a star.

Can if the stars (càn ruòfán xρng), can: brilliant. Numerous. Shining like many stars in the sky. There are many outstanding talents.

1 Detailed explanation, shining like a star:

The explanation of "can": can (brilliant) is dazzling, such as "sunny" or simply can, such as "can if the morning star."

Explanation of "Stars": There are many and dense stars all over the sky, and many stars are explained in detail. One of Fu Xuan's miscellaneous poems in the Jin Dynasty: "The stars depend on the blue sky, each leaving a line." In the Song Dynasty, Ceng Gong wrote a litchi poem: "Who can be as powerful as an ox, only after picking the stars?" Shenqing's Reply to Six Chapters of a Floating Life.

2. Idiom structure: subject-predicate idioms

3. Emotional color: neutral idioms

4. Application:

"The treasure of the southeast is like a star": the talents in the southeast are outstanding. The phrase "the treasure of the southeast is as bright as the stars" comes from Liu Yiqing's Appreciation of Shi Shuo Xin Yu in the Southern Song Dynasty, which means that the outstanding talents in the southeast are as bright as the stars in the sky, and now it is used to praise the outstanding talents in a place.