one 's resonant voice rings out
Huang zhongdalu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu á ngzh ō NGD à L ǚ, which means to describe music or words as solemn, grand, elegant and harmonious. From "Zhou Li · chunguan · Da sile".
The origin of Idioms
"Zhou Li · chunguan · Da Si Le" says: "it's playing Huang Zhong, singing Dalu, dancing Yunmen to worship the gods." Zheng Xuan's note: "take the bell of Huang Zhong and the sound of Da Lu as the average, the first of Huang Zhong's and Yang's, and Da Lu as the combination."
Idiom usage
It is used to describe the solemnity of music or diction. Examples: Mr. Wen Ru ~, the secret of Huang Qizhu and Zou Lu in the developed nine regions, is not passed on? Lu Jiuyuan, Song Dynasty
Idiom explanation
It describes music or speech as solemn, grand, wonderful and harmonious.
Chinese PinYin : huáng zhōng dà lǚ
one 's resonant voice rings out
the spring snow -- a highbrow song. yáng chūn bái xuě
attend all the housework personally. qīn cāo jǐng jiù
able to work both at the top and down below. néng shàng néng xià