have a noble brow
Toujiaozhengrong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó Uji ǎ ozhen ē NgR ó ng, which means that the original metaphor highlights talent and ability. After describing the spirit of extraordinary talent, especially young people. From Liu Zihou's epitaph.
Idiom explanation
Toujiao: refers to the talent of young people; Zhengrong: outstanding appearance. He is young and talented.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's epitaph of Liu Zihou in Tang Dynasty: "although he is young, he has become an adult, and he can take the place of Jinshi, so he has come to the fore." Song Zichun's poem "Ode to herding cattle with endless residents" said: "before the head and corner are towering, you can sleep in the depths of chaotic clouds." Yuan Xianyu Biren's song "the order of breaking the laurel, the flying rain at Jimen" reads: "everywhere, Tianjin is connected, the corner is towering, and Pu woshu is gracious." Yuan. The third fold of Huang He Lou by Wu Mingshi: at that time, when the top corner was towering, it stirred the sea and turned the river into nine heaven. Shen Shouxian, Ming Dynasty, wrote in sanyuanji, saying, "when I'm in the sun, you'll see that you're standing tall. You'll show off your family and fame. It's also a sacrifice of three sacrifices and five tripods after death." In the first chapter of the romance of the Qing Dynasty, Cai Dongfan said: "at that time, my father and brother were looking over the river. Sure enough, there was a young man standing on the bank with a towering head and a magnificent appearance. He said:" this is a natural God. "
Analysis of Idioms
A new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf; a new-born calf
Chinese PinYin : tóu jiǎo zhēng róng
have a noble brow
there were snakes and vipers creeping around among the dragons -- the high and low were mixed together. lóng shé hùn zá