sigh with deep feeling
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǎ NK ǎ IX ì zh ī, which means feeling and sighing. It comes from "to the general of five senses".
Idiom explanation
Feeling: feeling; sigh: sigh; tie: connection.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Zhen of Han Dynasty wrote a poem "to the general of the five sense organs:" in autumn, I feel sad, and sigh with emotion. " Wang Xizhi's preface to the Orchid Pavilion collection in Jin Dynasty said: "I am tired of what I have been doing, and I am moved with emotion."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] full of emotion, full of emotion and [antonym] indifferent
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; used as predicate and object; used in people's emotions.
Chinese PinYin : gǎn kǎi xì zhī
sigh with deep feeling
One mistake is eternal hatred. yī shī zú chéng qiān gǔ hèn
The tooth of a horse is still in its infancy. jū chǐ wèi luò
We are invincible, and we can win every attack. zhàn wú bù shèng,gōng wú bù qǔ
To raise the spirits and clear the turbid. jī yáng qīng zhuó
swear to die refusing to kneel -- even death will not make one yield. shì sǐ bù qū