blazing with anger
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is m ù Gu ā NgR ú J ù. It means the eyes shine like a torch. I look at you angrily. It is also used to describe bright eyes or insight. It comes from the biography of Tan Daoji.
Analysis of Idioms
Bright eyes
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Tan Daoji in the Southern History: "when Daoji saw the harvest, he was angry and his eyes were burning. "I'll drink a Dendrobium between you and me."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning. There is a Shinto sitting in the middle. His face is more than a foot wide and his beard is full of cheeks. His shoulders and arms start up like a living one. In Ming Dynasty, Ling Mengchu's "Er Ke Pai An Qi Qi Qi" (Volume 5) and "Zhou Shu" (Volume 12), the biography of Wang xianzhuan of Qi Yang (Volume 12), it is said that "Xian's words are firm and self-evident. The emperor's envoys were wise to the constitution. The constitution has a brilliant vision, and it is a confrontation with wisdom. "The master of Dongxuan in the Qing Dynasty, Shuyi Ji, the blame of not burying, said:" when you see it in the moonlight, your body is covered with purple hair, shooting Zhang Xu. "
Idioms and allusions
During the northern and Southern Dynasties, there was a general named Tan Daoji in the state of song. He came out of a poor family and joined the army for more than 20 years. He rose from a soldier to a general. At the end of the Jin Dynasty, Liu Yu attacked the later Qin Dynasty and made many contributions to the war. After Liu Yilong ascended the throne, Tan Daoji was so famous that his left and right generals were brave and good at fighting, and his sons were in charge of military power, so the emperor was very worried. With the instigation of some ministers in the court, Emperor Wen of the Song Dynasty wanted to get rid of Tan Daoji. When Emperor Wen of Song Dynasty was seriously ill, Liu Yikang, king of Pengcheng, drew up an imperial edict to invite Tan Daoji to Beijing. After entering Beijing, Tan Daoji lived in Tancheng, Jiankang (Nanjing). After a period of time, he saw that emperor song Wendi was cured and was ready to go back. As a result, Tan Daoji was summoned back to the palace when he just got on the ship, and he was arrested and put into prison for plotting rebellion. Then his son and his ministry were all killed. Tan Daoji was charged with treason and put into prison, "angry and flaming.". Before his execution, he was angry and resentful. He drank a cup of wine (a cup of rice can hold five bushels of rice) and roared: "it's the great wall of bad Ru. "
Chinese PinYin : mù guāng rú jù
blazing with anger
be patient for a long time under another man 's domination. jiǔ jū rén xià
happy ending without happy beginning. yù yáng xiān yì