be exquisitely dainty and ravishingly beautiful
Qianjiaobaimei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NJI ā ob ǎ im è I, which means to describe a beautiful woman's posture. From zaqu and Youxian cave.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Chen Xuling's zaqu poem: "green, black and red are in two phases, and a thousand beauties and a hundred emotions are endless." In Tang Dynasty, Zhang Wencheng's "Youxian Grottoes", it is said that "a thousand beauties and a hundred beauties can't be compared with each other; weak body and light body can't be fully prepared."
Idiom usage
The third part of Yuan Wumingshi's Yuanyang quilt: "I think this woman's life is very charming, and she is not a mean person." The first part of Yuan Wu Ming Shi's poem "Ode to Chibi in drunken writing" says: "he was born in a charming and charming way. He was more speechless than flowers and less fragrant than jade." Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty (Volume 28): Wu yamen looks at miss he carefully under the lamp, and feels more charming. The first act of Xia Yan's fascist bacteria: "this Miss Qian Ba, who ranks eighth, is really beautiful. I don't exaggerate my words. She is really charming."
Chinese PinYin : qiān jiāo bǎi mèi
be exquisitely dainty and ravishingly beautiful
break the literature into pieces and take one paragraph or few sentences. duàn zhāng jié jù
Carry five cars in one's stomach. fù zài wǔ chē
speak of dream in a dream -- supernatural. mèng zhōng shuō mèng
receive flattery or compliment. dài gāo mào ér