so hot on stones that gold might have melted there
Shuoyuli ú J ī n is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Shu ò y ù Li ú J ī n, which means that the temperature is very high and it can melt the gold and stone. It describes the heat. From charcoal.
The origin of Idioms
Song Sushi's "charcoal" poem: "throwing mud and splashing water, the brighter, shining jade and flowing gold, the more brilliant."
Idiom usage
The weather is very hot.
Chinese PinYin : shuò yù liú jīn
so hot on stones that gold might have melted there
accept what is wrong as right when one grows accustomed to it. xí fēi chéng shì
make comments about the good or the evil of a character. yuè dàn chūn qiū
Different ice and charcoal vessels. bīng tàn bù tóng qì
too sad and shocking to the ear. cǎn bù rěn wén
stand on the edge of a pool and idly long for fish. lín chuān xiàn yú