Pastry with powder
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is d ī f ě NCU ō s ū, which means that the face is thinly powdered and rubbed with hands, which describes a woman's soft and delicate skin. It comes from the fourth volume of Yuzhao Xinzhi by Wang Ming and Qing of Song Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Powder: fat powder; rub: rub; crisp: smooth and soft. Face thin powder, rub with hand lubrication. It describes a woman's delicate skin.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth volume of Yuzhao Xinzhi written by Wang Ming and Qing of Song Dynasty: "the music books of the Tang and Qian shogunate are well-known, and Shu Zhang's female is well-known. They are beautiful in color and art. They are all made for the sake of consistency. At that time, there was a saying that "when the wind blows and the moon falls, the willows change three times, and when the powder drips and crushes, the left and the word speak."
Idiom usage
Example: melancholy and confusion, wine bowel thrifty, leakage will be residual. Jade tonight, drop powder rub crisp, should gather Meishan. Song Dynasty Zeng Xun's "telling one's heart · night straight Palace · night snow"
Chinese PinYin : dī fěn cuō sū
Pastry with powder
like fans being out of use after autumn. qiū fēng tuán shàn
If a man drinks, he knows the cold and the warm. rú rén yǐn shuǐ,lěng nuǎn zì zhī
entice one 's opponents to leave their vantage ground. diào hǔ lí shān
man 's heart is incomprehensible. rén xīn pǒ cè
many officials and dignitaries. xuān gài rú yún