soul-stirring
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu í ch á NGD à ngq à, which means to make the liver and intestines revolve and the heart agitate. It describes articles and music as very tactful and moving. It comes from a dream of Red Mansions.
Notes on Idioms
Back: turning; swing: shaking.
The origin of Idioms
Guo Ze's a true dream of Red Mansions in the Qing Dynasty: Tan Chun also rushed to see it and said, "the words are wonderful, but they are too sad. It's really refreshing to end up with a few sentences! "
Idiom usage
It refers to the moving depth of music articles. Example makes a sad background flash in front of their eyes, and their frank heart can also blend him, so that he no longer has the power to refresh his heart. (Zhu Ziqing's collection of poems by the lake)
Chinese PinYin : huí cháng dàng qì
soul-stirring
hearing heavenly music played. jūn tiān guǎng yuè
Explain the mystery but not the white. zhù xuán shàng bái
wish to change one 's work the moment one sees sth. different. jiàn yì sī qiān
Turning from precipice to stone. xuán yá zhuǎn shí
there is no lack of people of that ilk. shí fān yǒu tú