speak in excitement emotion
Impassioned, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ā NGK ǎ ij ī á ng, which means excited, emotional and full of healthy. From Lu BIE Shi.
The origin of Idioms
Li Ling of the Han Dynasty wrote in his farewell poem: "how generous is the sad meaning, and the Qingge is in full swing." Liu Zongyuan's shangquanyu buque wenjuanjuanjuanjuanqi in the Tang Dynasty: "today, I will be impassioned, bustling with cloth clothes, talking about the author's feast, and dragging the train to the door of Mingqing."
Idiom usage
When it comes to state affairs, we should always talk about it with great enthusiasm and a little bit of bickering. Guo Moruo's the spring and Autumn period of Revolution: the sequel to the decade of creation
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: ebullient and spirited; antonym: depressed and listless
Idiom story
At the end of the Warring States period, Crown Prince Dan of Yan fled back from the state of Qin and visited the righteous scholars Jing Ke and Gao Jianli, asking Jing Ke to assassinate King Ying Zheng of Qin. When everything is ready, Prince Dan leads his men to send them to Yishui with white clothes. Gao Jianli strikes the building. Jing Ke sings: "the wind is bleak, the Yishui is cold, and the strong man will never return when he goes." The song was generous and passionate, touching, and the party said goodbye in tears
Chinese PinYin : kāng kǎi jī áng
speak in excitement emotion
have a heart-to-heart talk after a long separation. fēng yǔ duì chuáng
faithful words grate upon the ear. zhōng yán nì ěr
incur a considerable or great expense. suǒ fèi bù zī