brilliantly illuminated
Brilliant lights, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ē nghu ǒ Hu ī Hu á ng, describes the prosperous scene of bright lights at night. It comes from Volume 22 of Yu Shi Ming Yan by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty's "Yu Shi Ming Yan" Volume 22: "emperor LiZong visited the garden, climbed the Fenghuang mountain, and at night saw the lights in the west lake shining brightly."
Idiom usage
A dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty Chapter 7: you and others sent them to the hall to see them, and all the young men stood by in Danlong. Chapter 14 of Shi Yukun's three heroes and five righteousness in Qing Dynasty: later, when the people in the tree saw that the people below were shouting and the lights were shining, he started to move.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] firetree silver light, Zhang dengjiecai [antonym] black light, dark sky and dark earth
Chinese PinYin : dēng huǒ huī huáng
brilliantly illuminated
clean-fingered and influential high-ranking officials. bā fǔ xún àn
make slanderous charges at sb. hán xuè xùn rén
be brilliant enough to reflect one 's image. guāng kě jiàn rén
Be good as a man, be evil as a man. cóng shàn rú dēng,cóng è rú bēng