glaring eyes
Glaring, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is n ù m ù h é NGM é I, which means raising eyebrows and opening eyes to describe the appearance of glaring. It comes from the record of Jianjie written by He Guangyuan in the late Shu Dynasty of the Five Dynasties.
Idiom usage
A group of people who have been in the yard for a long time, with angry brows and big chests, can only hear the sound of many steps in the yard.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: frown antonym: smile
The origin of Idioms
He Guangyuan's jianjielu in the late Shu period of the Five Dynasties quoted Chen Yu's poem: "if you are angry and angry, you will be the powerful God of Yan Fu. It's not the mud that makes the Han people, the incense that makes the snake people. "
Idiom explanation
He raised his eyebrows and widened his eyes. Describe the look of glaring.
Chinese PinYin : nù mù héng méi
glaring eyes
allow oneself to be insulted to remain alive. rěn gòu tōu shēng
feel like old friends at the first meeting. yī jiàn rú gù