extremely clever
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ju é D ǐ NGC ō NGM í ng, which means extremely clever. From Zhuangzi's critique.
Notes on Idioms
Extreme: extreme.
The origin of Idioms
Guo Moruo's criticism of Chuang Tzu: "Chuang Tzu is a man of great intelligence, and his disciples are also some of them."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; used in spoken English. Chapter 87 of Cao Xueqin's a dream of Red Mansions in Qing Dynasty: Daiyu was a brilliant man, and she had studied in the south for a long time. Though she was born by hand, she was familiar with it in the end. The fifth chapter of the complete biography of eight immortals written by Taoist Wugui in Qing Dynasty: "he was originally a man with excellent roots and excellent intelligence, and he understood it at that time." Guo Moruo's critique of Chuang Tzu: "Chuang Tzu is extremely intelligent, and his disciples are also extremely intelligent." Gao Yang's complete biography of Hu Xueyan: a smooth walk in the clouds Volume I: "because he is extremely intelligent, good at recognizing people, and can speak well and have a generous hand, he has been a full teacher for three years." Liu Fu's reprint & lt; he Dian & gt; Preface: "this kind of work can't be produced by the most intelligent people."
Chinese PinYin : jué dǐng cōng míng
extremely clever
Wrong recognition of face mark. cuò rèn yán biāo
the widower , the widow , the orphan and the childless. guān guǎ gū dú