Rise from behind
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is B è ISH ā NQ ǐ L ó u, meaning to build a building on a mountain. It is a metaphor for a disappointing thing. It comes from Xikun style, the first collection of Ruxi yuyinconghua.
The origin of Idioms
In the Song Dynasty, Hu Zai's first collection of Ruxi yuyinconghua, Xikun style: "one of them is killing scenery, which means washing feet in clear spring, drying trousers on flowers, building from a mountain, burning Qin and boiling crane, sipping tea on flowers and drinking from Panasonic."
Analysis of Idioms
It's a disaster
Idiom usage
It means to destroy the scenery. The first volume of Li Shangyin's miscellaneous compilation in the Tang Dynasty: "killing scenery: the sun shines under the flowers, and the tower rises from the back of the mountain." Xiao Wang is a man who does everything he says and does everything he does. His colleagues are chatting with each other very much. I saw him come to him, and after a few words, everyone broke up.
Idiom story
Li Shangyin, a poet of Tang Dynasty, was very talented. His poems exposed and criticized the dark reality and official corruption at that time. In zazuan, he listed some things that were very harmful to the scenery, such as "washing feet in clear spring, drying flowers on the back of the mountain, building from the back of the mountain, burning Qin and boiling crane, sipping tea to flowers and drinking from Panasonic." These were all disappointing things at that time.
Chinese PinYin : bèi shān qǐ lóu
Rise from behind
reach for what is beyond one 's grasp. chí gāo wù yuǎn
be nurtured by confucian ideas. yí shuǐ chūn fēng
feel ashamed of one 's ungainly appearance. zì jué xíng huì