halls for the performance of songs and dances
Getai Wuxie, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ē t á IW ǔ Xi è, which means a place for performing music and dancing. From the ancient city of cloud.
Idiom explanation
Xie: a house built on a high platform.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Ling of Tang Dynasty asked Fu of ancient city in cloud: "singing, dancing and pavilion, moon hall and cloud hall."
Idiom usage
It refers to the place of singing and dancing. In Song Dynasty, Xin Qiji's yongyule · Beigu Pavilion in Jingkou reminisces of the past: "the wind and rain always blow away when dancing on the pavilion." Their footprints can often be seen between singing and dancing. The second chapter of the Tang Dynasty's Cai Fu's hedonic pool movement: "singing, dancing and pavilion are suitable for the first month, and Meizhou on the Bank of the willow is better than before. The dancing Pavilion, the green sun, the grass and trees, the common alleys and alleys, and the human immortals once lived. Through the ages, heroes can never find sun Zhongmou's place. When they dance on the platform, they are always swept away by the wind and rain.
Chinese PinYin : gē tái wǔ xiè
halls for the performance of songs and dances
a nodding acquaintance with. diǎn tóu zhī jiāo
regard a hazardous location as level ground -- no fear of danger and difficulties. shì xiǎn ruò yí
a method not suited for the purpose. cóng jǐng jiù rén