dampen the spirits
Dasha scenery is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à sh à f à NGJ à ng, which means to damage the scenery and people's interest. Today, it is generally called the killing scene.
Idiom explanation
It means to damage the scenery and people's interest. Today, it is generally called the killing scene.
Idioms and allusions
Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty listed "drinking among flowers" and "putting fire under the moon" as "killing scenery" in his miscellaneous compilation. 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.
Discrimination of words
Spoilone's senthusiasm & lt; throw away plane over & gt; idiom information idiom explanation: it means to damage the scenery and people's interest. Today, it is generally called the killing scene. Example of idiom: we were having a barbecue in the suburbs when it suddenly began to rain. It was a killing scene. Common degree: common emotional color: derogatory words usage: as predicate, attribute; refers to the untimely idiom structure: verb object type generation time: Ancient
Chinese PinYin : dà shā fēng jǐng
dampen the spirits
engrave on one's mind or memory. míng zhū fèi fǔ
it takes a hundred years to educate the people. bǎi zǎi shù rén
violate rules and overstep all bounds. dàng jiǎn yú xián
have whatever one 's heart desires. cóng xīn suǒ yù
The door never closes at night. mén bù yè guān