a smile has driven all the hard lines in his face and brightened his countenance
Xiaozhuyankai is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi à ozh ú y á NK à I, which means to smile so that the face can be stretched out; it describes a smiling face and a very happy appearance. From Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Smile with happy eyes, smile with happy eyes
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his first surprise: "my mother just turned from worry to joy. She said with a smile:" thanks to my son's success, I have worked hard sometimes. "
Idiom usage
The 49th chapter of Water Margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty, sun lisun's new big prison break, Jiezhen Jiebao double prison break, Song Jiang heard it and said with great joy: "wonderful Just now, I'm smiling. In the popular novel of Beijing, ghost in Xishan Cave: "after listening to this, the professor was happy and said with a smile:" if there is such a person, it's good! " Lin Mengchu, Ming Dynasty, wrote in his "surprise at the first moment of making a case": "my mother just turned from worry to joy, and said with a smile:" I owe it to my son that he has a glorious day, and sometimes he works hard. " "Du Shiniang angrily sank the treasure chest:" Li Jia took three hundred Liang silver, happy from the sky, smiling, happy to see Shiniang Chapter 38 of Chen Canyun's the wind and smoke in the valley: "most people are very satisfied with it. Even Liu Caifa's family has a table for eight immortals."
Chinese PinYin : xiào zhú yán kāi
a smile has driven all the hard lines in his face and brightened his countenance
form a connecting link between the preceding and the following. chéng shàng qǐ xià
do a discreditable thing secretly. àn shì sī xīn