variegated
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ā Nb ó L ù L í, which means to describe different colors. It comes from Li Sao written by Qu Yuan in the Warring States period.
Idiom explanation
Mottled: disordered colors. Lu Li: it looks different. It is used to describe a variety of colors.
The origin of Idioms
Source: Chu Ci Li Sao written by Qu Yuan in Warring States Period: "there are always different ways of separation and reunion, and the spots are different from each other."
Analysis of Idioms
It is used as predicate and attributive to describe scenery. idiom: refute, can not be read as "B é". idiom shape: spot, can't write "class". analysis of idioms: variegated and "bizarre"; both have the meaning of "complex colors". Variegated emphasis on the "messy, colorful"; "bizarre" emphasis on a variety of colors; "bizarre" can be described as "luster" or "strange shape" and "strange social phenomenon". There is no such intention.
Idiom usage
An example is Pu Songling's Liaozhaizhiyi Guping in the Qing Dynasty: "the utensils can be held together, weighing dozens of Jin, with double rings on the side. I don't know how to use them. They are mottled." In the preface to Banqiao written by Zheng Xie of Qing Dynasty, he said: "sometimes when we talk about scriptures, we also love their variegated and colorful styles." Lu Xun's the story of shouting and hair: "most of the families walk lazily out of a country and pout up a mottled cloth.
Chinese PinYin : bān bó lù lí
variegated
plan very carefully with every conceivable possibility taken into account. móu wú yí cè