jade-like flowers of the fairy land
Qihua yaocao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin Q í Hu ā y á OC ǎ o, means flowers and plants in fairyland. From Wang Hu's dream fairy ballad.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: exotic flowers and plants, Yao Cao Qi Hua, exotic flowers and plants
Idiom usage
As the subject, object and attribute, it refers to exotic flowers and plants. Chapter 70 of Wu Chengen's journey to the West (demons set off smoke, sand and fire, Wukong plans to steal the purple Bell): the traveler hears the words, drags away, knocks the Gong, and walks into the front door to see the place. It turns out that it is a cliff, a stone house, a virtual hall, with qihuayaocao on the left and right, and many ancient cypresses and pines on the front and back. The 36th chapter of Chen Chen's "Water Margin" in Qing Dynasty: "there is a natural stone platform, which is like a swallow in jiankangying. It is exquisitely exquisitely exquisitely carved and full of wonderful flowers and herbs." In the song of looking at Luo Fu written by Li Ying in the Qing Dynasty, "Qi Hua Yao Cao covers the cliff and valley, and bangs on the top of the drum." Contemporary · the second chapter of Yin Qian's Tianting secret biography: "the boundless green pines and cypresses, the green waves everywhere in the wind. The main hall of Yujing palace has a golden roof and a hundred Li Qiong pavilion with Zhubi tiles. Outside the palace gate, there are many flowers and herbs, and the sky is full of splendor. Beside the jade bridge, the rainbow grass is fragrant and the water is flowing
The origin of Idioms
Wang Hu's "dream fairy ballad": "the prospect gradually feels the scenery is good, the Qi flower piece sticks the Yao grass."
Chinese PinYin : qí huā yáo cǎo
jade-like flowers of the fairy land
green light and yellow volume -- to study at night. qīng dēng huáng juàn
give confidential instructions in person. miàn shòu jī yí