palaces in the moon
Qionglou Yuyu is a Chinese idiom pronounced Qi ó NGL ó uy ù y ǔ, which refers to the palace in the middle of the moon and the tower in the fairyland. It also describes magnificent buildings. It's from shiyiji.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Jia of Jin Dynasty wrote in his book Shiyi Ji: "when Zhai Qianhu was playing with the moon on the Bank of the river, he asked," what's in this? " Zhai said with a smile, "you can follow me." I see that the building is in a state of decay. "
Idiom usage
Combined; as subject, predicate and object; with commendatory meaning. I want to go back by the wind, but I'm afraid that it's too cold at high places. Song · Sushi's poem shuidiao Getou
Chinese PinYin : qióng lóu yù yǔ
palaces in the moon
surrender one 's power to another at one 's own peril. tài ē dào chí
as brilliant as the sun , the moon and the stars. bǐng ruò rì xīng