many-storied buildings
Tall buildings, Chinese vocabulary.
Pinyin: G à ot á NGD à sh à
Interpretation: refers to the towering building. The same as "tall buildings".
idiom
many-storied buildings
Pinyin
gāotángdàshà
Citation explanation
A towering building. The same as "tall buildings". The fourth fold of Liu Xingshou written by Yang Xian in Yuan Dynasty: "master, it's quiet here. My disciples don't love high buildings." Qiu Chuji of the Yuan Dynasty: the land of Nancun is the best. The meandering water crosses the willow path horizontally and obliquely. It's a pond. Clap the lotus on the wall. many-storied buildings. Every household can be painted like a screen. High mountains and high hills. Day by day, the clouds are far away and auspicious. Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty, Volume 3 of Xingshi Hengyan, oil peddler monopolizes Huakui: how can the little lady live in Xiaoke's house? Chapter 8 of he Dian: you can't help but make him a little grandmother. He lives in a high-rise building and can't enjoy all kinds of food and clothing. Liu Dabai's poem "thirsty to kill bitterness" reads: "look back at the landlords, tall buildings, sitting around waiting for rent collection!"
Discrimination of words
High rise building, high hall and broad building
Chinese PinYin : gāo táng dà shà
many-storied buildings
Soldiers come to the enemy, water comes to the earth. bīng lái jiàng dí,shuǐ lái tǔ yàn
have everything that one expects to find. yīng yǒu jìn yǒu
messengers of the gods and spirits. shén chāi guǐ shǐ