billow
Stormy waves, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NGT ā on ù L à ng, which means a metaphor for dangerous environment or sharp and fierce struggle. From "on the view of painting, don't know.".
The origin of Idioms
Han Zhuo, Song Dynasty, wrote in his book on the appreciation of paintings: "between the steep cliffs and the steep walls, a stream of water flies out, like a thousand feet hanging under the ten thousand feet. There are turbulent waves, surging and boiling, splashing and drifting."
Analysis of Idioms
A big wave, a big wave, a big wave
Idiom usage
In the song of fishing at the new beach, you can see that the new beach is very dangerous. You can hear it all over the world, and the waves are like mountains. "In Xiaoting miscellany · Li zhuanggie's battle trail written by Zhao Yao of Qing Dynasty," the Lord is wrapped in blood and suffers from sores. More than a hundred battles are in the stormy waves, so that the thief can't rest. His elite is dying day by day. It's easy for him to succeed in his miraculous work. "
Chinese PinYin : jīng tāo nù làng
billow
feast the revelry all night long. cháng yè zhī yǐn
the nearest to the flames is the first burned. jìn huǒ xiān jiāo
good writings make people copy them. luò yáng zhǐ guì