stately
In Chinese, Pinyin is t á ng é Rhu á ngzh ī, which means to describe dignified or majestic style. It also means that on the surface it is solemn and upright, but in reality it is not. From lace literature Shakespeare.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Xun's "lacy literature" Shakespeare: "the last sentence is polite. In fact, many people agree with Mr. Shi. Otherwise, can it be published in the magazine?
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: dignified, brazen, open fire, high sounding, unbridled
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's predicate and attribute; it's overt and derogatory. Examples 1. Lu Xun's "lacy literature" Shakespeare: "can it be published in a magazine (2) Ye Junjian's "sparks" 18: "he Yuqing came to the county to pay a visit to his" friend "Zhou Huafu, the county master." 3. Ye Shengtao's four or three episodes: an intern: in this era, it's very important to work. (4) Zou Taofen's experience stepping into John: sitting in rows of low chairs is similar to kneeling down, so everyone is careless and still sits in a dignified manner.
Chinese PinYin : táng ér huáng zhī
stately
It's easy to hide an open gun, but hard to defend a hidden one. míng qiāng yì duǒ,àn jiàn nán fáng
no hatred or grievance against. bù cún jiè dì
heaven and earth will not tolerate. tiān lǐ bù róng