Liu xiaohuajiao
Liuzhou Huajiao, a Chinese idiom, is Li ǔ Du ǒ Hu ā Ji ā o in pinyin, which means that the willows are soft and the flowers are delicate. It refers to the beauty of a woman. It's from the book of frost in June.
The origin of Idioms
In the negative collection of June frost written by Ying Zong's Ji nu in the Qing Dynasty, she said, "the body is originally a girl named liuguahuajiao; the body is originally a family of officials surrounded by jade beads."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : liǔ duǒ huā jiāo
Liu xiaohuajiao
exotic and strangely scented flowers. qí huā yì huì
behead enemy generals and capture their flags. zhǎn jiàng qiān qí
find it hard to vindicate oneself. bǎi kǒu nán fēn