ablazing with lights
The Chinese idiom, D ē ngzh ú Hu ī Hu á ng in pinyin, means to describe the bright and dazzling lights. From the romance of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom explanation
Brilliant: brilliant.
The origin of Idioms
The 47th chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in the Ming Dynasty: "when the sergeant led him to kaize, he saw the brilliant lights on the account, and Cao Cao sat in danger with a few."
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, attribute, complement; used to describe the night scene. Chapter 8 of three heroes and five virtues by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty. In the Qing Dynasty, Chu Ren won the 17th chapter of the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties: "Shubao's class bid farewell to the young master, went out to play on the court, went to the blue bridge, and saw the lights shining in the neighborhood."
Chinese PinYin : dēng zhú huī huáng
ablazing with lights
to rule the people oppressively. rú láng mù yáng
like the palm of one 's own hand. liǎo rú zhǐ zhǎng
a feast in which figures every delicacy from land and sea. shuǐ lù bì chén
the paper is too short to describe one 's feelings. zhǐ duǎn qíng cháng