Falling in disorder
Luanjiao is a Chinese idiom, and its pinyin is Lu à nzhu à Ti à nhu à, which means moving words or wonderful words. It refers to exaggeration or impracticality. It comes from the preface of Xindi guanjing.
Idiom explanation
it refers to moving words or wonderful words. It refers to exaggeration or impracticality.
The origin of Idioms
The preface of Xindi guanjing: "the six desires are supported by the heaven, and the flowers fall into the void."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: extravagant, unrealistic
Idiom usage
Li Yu in Qing Dynasty wrote "Huang Qiu Feng Zuo Nan": "those two women were not stubborn at first. They told me that I fell in love, but he just ignored me." Guo Moruo's sequel to the literary and artistic treatises on the immortality of literature and Art: "you will know that some articles there are still everywhere."
Chinese PinYin : luàn zhuì tiān huā
Falling in disorder
an outwardly kind but inwardly cruel person. xiào miàn hǔ
Clear the way before and clear the way after. tōng qián chè hòu
change filial obedience into allegiance. yí xiào zuò zhōng