Three hairs on cheek
San Mao on cheek, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji á sh à ngs à nm á o, which means to compare the charm of an article or a picture. It's from "new words of the world · Qiaoyi".
The origin of Idioms
"Gu Changkang painted Pei Shuze, and his cheek was covered with three hairs. Why do people ask? Gu said: "Pei Kai Junlang has a cognitive tool. This is his cognitive tool. If there is a God, it is better than the unsettled time. "
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: buccal San Hao
Idiom usage
In Li Yu's "the edge of love · rolling curtain" in Qing Dynasty, it is said that "when you draw a lonely pine on the ridge, it will be like three hairs on your cheek."
Chinese PinYin : jiá shàng sān máo
Three hairs on cheek
people starved to death are everywhere. è piǎo mǎn dào
Show off to meet the traitor. mài qiào yíng jiān
Thousands of mountains and thousands of rocks. wàn hè qiān yán