Jing xingqingyun
Jing xingqingyun, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ǐ NGX ī ngq ì ngy ú n, which means a metaphor for auspicious omens. From yushuzan.
Idiom explanation
Qingyun, colorful cloud, auspicious cloud.
The origin of Idioms
Fang Xiaoru of the Ming Dynasty wrote "Yu Shu Zan": "only the sky does not speak, and the image shows people. Xi xianchuguang, Jing xingqingyun."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: Jing xingfenghuang, Jing xinglinfeng
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; a sign of good luck. Examples there are words of "the Great Dipper.". Yun Jing's answer to Yao qiunong's book in Qing Dynasty and Pang Jue's biography of Mr. Xiyi in Song Dynasty: the scholar bureaucrats of Tang Dynasty tried to know Mr. jingxingqingyun's face with the help of his breeze. They were eager to see it first, but they were not friends with each other. (Mr. Xi Yi, Chen Tuan)
Chinese PinYin : jǐng xīng qìng yún
Jing xingqingyun
phoenix crying in the morning. míng fèng zhāo yáng
speak of ice to insects that live only one summer. xià chóng yǔ bīng
Thinking of women and sick mother. sī fù bìng mǔ