lustrous and dazzling
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu ā nggu à IL ù L í, which means to describe strange shapes and colorful. It comes from Li Sao written by Qu Yuan in the Warring States period.
Interpretation of Idioms
Guangguai: brilliant strange; Luli: uneven opening. It is used to describe strange shapes and colors.
The origin of Idioms
Chu Quyuan's Lisao in the Warring States Period: "there are always many different ways of separation and reunion, but there are many different ways of separation and reunion." In the biography of Sun Jian, Wu Zhi, the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Pei Songzhi quoted the book of Wu as saying: "there are strange lights on the tombs. The clouds are of five colors. They belong to the heaven and stretch for miles."
Analysis of Idioms
words whose meaning is similar
variegated
Idiom usage
A combination; used as predicate and attribute; used to describe the colorful scenery
Examples
The firewood was burned one by one, and the result was as strange as Taihu Lake stone. ——The 55th chapter of scholars by Wu Jingzi in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : guāng guài lù lí
lustrous and dazzling
the path was covered with grass and thorns. jīng jí zài tú