Chi Lihong Yan
Chi lihongyan is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is ch ǐ L ì h ó ngy ǎ n, which is interpreted as gorgeous and rich. It is often used to refer to words. It comes from the history of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Later on, Song Yu, Tang Le, Han Xing, Mei Cheng, Sima Xiangru, and Yangzi Yun were named Ci of Chi Li and Hong Yan, which had no meaning of Feng Yu."
Idiom usage
Because of the development of Fu in the Han Dynasty, this extravagant writing skill gave a new inspiration to the literati at that time. Guo Shaoyu's history of Chinese literary criticism, Chapter 3, section 13
Chinese PinYin : chǐ lì hóng yǎn
Chi Lihong Yan
Changing column and stretching string. gǎi zhù zhāng xián
have suffered bitterly in the old society and have a deep class hatred. kǔ dà chóu shēn
tear a body limb from limb by five horses -- a form of death sentence in ancient times. wǔ mǎ fēn shī
get throught a thing carelessly. cǎo cǎo liǎo shì
strike out a new path for oneself. zì chū jī zhù