as one can imagine
As you can imagine, the Pinyin of Chinese idioms is k ě Xi ǎ ng é RZH ī, which means you can imagine without explanation. From the wild guest series.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Mao of Song Dynasty's "wild guest series": the suburbs abandoned their duties by chanting poems, and the upper officials sent officials to take charge of their duties. It can be imagined that they were half rich and strong.
Idiom usage
Chapter 71 of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: their behavior is so that we can imagine the filial piety of their families, so they are immortal today. The first chapter of Gao E's the sequel of Lao Can's travels in the Qing Dynasty: you want the Japanese to train the army and take the maps of the three eastern provinces as their homework.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: Inconceivable
Chinese PinYin : kě xiǎng ér zhī
as one can imagine
see through sb . 's treachery. dòng zhú qí jiān
make frivolous remarks about sb . 's appearance. pǐn tóu lùn zú
the breeze is fresh and the moon bright. fēng qīng yuè jiāo
two dogs strive for a bone , and a third runs away with it. yú wēng dé lì
make the country rich and stable. fù guó ān mín
his hands respond with delicacy to whatever the mind directs. xīn shǒu xiāng yìng