full of wit
Brilliant, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C á Ihu á h é ngy ì, which means very talented, mostly referring to Literature and art. It's different from being sharp. It comes from the collection of jiayetang in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Qing Dynasty, Liao Quansun and Wu Changshou's "jiayitang collection of books · qingbie Ji" said: "the pavilion is well-known, knowledgeable, and has brilliant prose, but it is still full of ink, parallel style and elegant."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as predicate, object, attribute; refers to a very talented person. He has shown great talent since he was a child.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonyms: talent is rare and shallow (talent: talent; sparse: emptiness; shallow. Talent is not high; knowledge is not deep)
Chinese PinYin : cái huá héng yì
full of wit
fish do not come when water is too clear. shuǐ qīng wú yú
The butterfly loves the bee. dié liàn fēng kuáng
blow on an instrument or finger a stringed instrument. pǐn zhú tán sī
maintain an old acquaintanceship having no real understanding with each other. bái tóu rú xīn
Fifty steps make a hundred. wǔ shí bù xiào bǎi bù
be ready to realize one 's aspiration anywhere all over the country. sì fāng zhī zhì