surge high and sweep forward
Broad road, Chinese idiom, Pinyin for B ō L ù Zhu à ngkuॸ, meaning the metaphor of a grand scale, powerful. It comes from the book of Deng Da Lei An and Mei by Bao Zhao in the Southern Dynasty: "the tourists are poor and the road is broad."
source
In the book of Deng Da Lei An and Mei, written by Bao Zhao in the Southern Dynasty of Song Dynasty, it is said that "the tourists are poor and the road is broad."
usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in articles, sports, etc.
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: broad road [Pinyin]: B ō L ù Zhu à ngku ò [explanation]: wave road: waves. It refers to the grand scale and great momentum. The same as "magnificent". Surface forward like as weepingtide
Idioms and allusions
Lang tinghuai's continuation of the biography of teachers' and friends' poems in Qing Dynasty: "seven character poems must be magnificent, tumultuous and exciting, and open and close ears."
Discrimination of words
[commonly used degree]: General [emotional color]: commendatory [grammatical usage]: used as predicate and attribute; used in articles, sports, etc. Idiom structure: subject predicate form: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : bō lù zhuàng kuò
surge high and sweep forward
To lead a stranger by a stranger. yǐ gǔ yǐn gǔ
a person who returns to a place he once abandoned. qián dù liú láng