dainties of every kind
Shanzhenhaicuo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ā nzh ē NH ǎ ICU, which means all kinds of precious food produced in the mountains and the sea, and generally refers to rich dishes. From Chang'an Road poem.
Idiom explanation
Haicuo: refers to all kinds of seafood.
The origin of Idioms
Wei Yingwu of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the poem of Chang'an Road: "the mountains are precious, the sea is wrong, the fence is abandoned, and the lamb is cooked like a sunflower."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: delicious food, dragon liver and leopard gall, delicacies and seafood [antonym]: plain food, ordinary food
Idiom usage
As the subject, object, attribute; refers to food. Although there is only one meat and one vegetable, I think it's better than eight big and eight small mistakes, and I will never forget them. Miscellany of escape by Mao Dun
Chinese PinYin : shān zhēn hǎi cuò
dainties of every kind
emaciation with sallow complexion. liǎn huáng jī shòu
word for word and sentence for sentence. zhú jù zhú zì