a beauteous scene
Huamingliuyin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu ā m í ngli ǔ n, which means that the weeping willows are thick and the flowers are eye-catching. It describes the spring scene with willows in full shade and flowers in full bloom. It also refers to the turning point in the face of difficulties. From Sunset Tower.
The origin of Idioms
Li Shangyin's poem "Sunset Tower" in the Tang Dynasty: "the flowers are bright and the willows are dark, and the sky is full of sorrow. When you go up to the most important city, you go up to the tower."
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor for a turn in a difficult situation. example the flowers are bright and the willows are dark. Zhao's daughter goes to the painting building in spring. In Ming Dynasty, Liu Ji's poem "remembering the king and his grandson" and in Qing Dynasty, fan Yangxun's "rebuilding yuan Jiashan (yuan Keli's farewell) stele": "thus the song says:" the flowers are bright and the willows are dark, like the source of immortals; the flute and sword are blowing, and the crane is blowing the sky. God, I'll sleep in the cave when I'm drunk. Bless me for millions of years. "
Chinese PinYin : huā míng liǔ àn
a beauteous scene
change a fowling piece for a big gun. niǎo qiāng huàn pào
be backward and have no urge to make progress. zì bào zì qì
cover one 's face and creep away. bào tóu shǔ cuàn