beam with smiles
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ǐ zh ú y á NK ā I, which means to describe very happy, smiling face. From scholars.
Idiom explanation
By: follow; Yan: face, face.
The origin of Idioms
The seventh chapter of the scholars written by Wu Jingzi in the Qing Dynasty: "after learning the Tao, I feel happy and happy. I have no worries for a day."
Idiom usage
I'm very happy. I'm very happy.
Examples
The forty second chapter of Shi Naian's the complete story of the water margin in Ming Dynasty: "when Song Jiang saw it, he was glad to come down from the sky and was smiling."
"Surprise at the first moment" Volume 8: Chen Dalang said: "Xiao Ke would like to invite Lao Zhang's restaurant to have a drink. "The man came from afar. He was hungry and cold, and he was glad to hear that.
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty wrote: "the master's family got some small advantages, and they were very happy."
"Lao Can's travels" Chapter 17: "I sincerely see a purple flower seal, I don't feel happy
Gao Yunlan's spring and Autumn Annals of a small town, chapter 35: "the bridegroom and bride happily accept the banter and congratulations of the guests, and the room is full of laughter."
Chinese PinYin : xǐ zhú yán kāi
beam with smiles
Get rid of the bad and get rid of the bad. chú láng dé hǔ
as a man amongst the womenfolk. nǚ zhōng zhàng fū
put on gay clothing and powder one 's face. nóng zhuāng yàn mǒ
exhaust others to enrich oneself. jí rén féi jǐ