pleasing to ears and eyes
Qingge Miaowu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī NGG ē mi à ow ǔ, which means clear singing and wonderful dancing. From thinking.
The origin of Idioms
Song Zhi of Tang Dynasty asked you Si: "this young man is so pitiful. He is a beautiful young man. Under the trees of the prince Wang and sun Fang, before the flowers fall, singing and dancing
Idiom usage
Liu Chenweng's "You Si" in Tang Dynasty: "this young man's white head is so pitiful. Under the trees of the prince Wang and sun Fang, before the flowers fall, singing and dancing Jin Gehong's baopuzi Zhizhi: "light body, soft voice, singing and dancing." Tang Yang Jiong's "Wenjiang county magistrate Ren Jun Shendao stele" said: "the sword is crowned with feathers, and the jade is in front of it; the pool platform is in the garden, and the singing and dancing are behind it." Li Chun Tang, written by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty, said, "it's pleasant to sing and dance, and it's good for wine and fish." Tang Xianzu of the Ming Dynasty wrote "the story of Handan: extreme desire": "the purple neon clothes from the Buhan palace sing and dance one by one, which are unique in the world." Yuan Sadula's poem "Huaqing Qu Ti Yang Fei's diseased teeth" said: "the song and dance are quiet for a while, the swallow's voice and the warbler's cry are empty and heartbroken." In modern times, Liu Yazi's "Fa Kan Ci" said: "Cuiyu and Mingyu awaken the dream of Juntian; Qingge and Miaowu return the soul of the motherland."
Analysis of Idioms
Song and dance
Chinese PinYin : qīng gē miào wǔ
pleasing to ears and eyes
make the country rich and stable. fù guó ān mín
If you listen to both, you will be clear; if you believe something, you will be dark. jiān tīng zé míng,piān xìn zé àn
blow a shadow and carve on a particle of dust -- without seeing any expressions or movement. chuī yǐng lòu chén
commence business , now developed into a grand scale but with hardly anything to start with. téng kōng ér qǐ