Smoke and mist
Liuyanhuawu, a Chinese idiom, is Li ǔ y ā nhu ā w ù in pinyin, which describes the misty scene of spring. It comes from "congratulating the bridegroom, sending Zheng Zongcheng with Zhao and Zuo Siyun.".
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Wu Qian's "congratulating the bridegroom, sending Zheng Zongcheng away with Zhao's father's rhyme", the words are "still taking advantage of it, smoke and smoke.". I also complain about the mountain apes and cranes, asking when they will return to shuangxizhu. "
Idiom usage
Examples
Beside the rose, shake the dew. The clothes are fragrant and long-term. Double pillow Phoenix, a quilt Luan. Between. The Song Dynasty, Mao Pang's Ci of Geng Liu Zi, incense song
Chinese PinYin : liǔ yān huā wù
Smoke and mist
Rome wasn't built in a day. bīng dòng sān chǐ,fēi yī rì zhī hán
laws handed down from forefathers. zǔ zōng fǎ dù