graceful but not showy
Fengliuyunji is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is f ē n ɡ Li ú y ù NJI è, which means to describe a person who is elegant and talented. It also describes the article as elegant and implicit. It comes from the biography of Wang Xin in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] elegant and elegant; antonym] vulgar, cowardly and incompetent
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Wang Xin in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty: "knowledge has wind training, nine sons have been born, and the wind is flowing and the world is called Wang's Jiulong."
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's a predicate, an object and an attribute; it's commendatory. Examples in the book of Sui, biography of scholars, Yuanshan: "the good is broad; under he Tuo, however, it is romantic; the Fu Yang is considerable; the rhyme is clear; the listener is forgetful and tired." Wang Wei, a collection of different stories written by Xue Yongqiang of Tang Dynasty, said: "Wei's style is rich and colorful, and his language is humorous, which has attracted the attention of all the nobles." Volume 25: "when he saw the court's ruling, he was ready to marry him." Shen Qian of Qing Dynasty wrote two pieces of Zhang Shiwen's "new grass pond" and "Ziyan Shuangfei" in his "miscellaneous notes on ci writing · warning strategies on ci writing"
Chinese PinYin : fēng liú yùn jiè
graceful but not showy
When a deer dies, it will not choose its shade. lù sǐ bù zé yīn
prey upon one 's country and injure the people. dù guó hào mín