many officials and dignitaries
Xuangairuyun is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Xu à ng à IR ú y ú n, which means that it used to describe many officials and the grand gathering of officials and gentry. It comes from the preface of Li Lushi's house in Linqiong, a banquet in winter, written by Chen Zi'ang of Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Chen Zi'ang's preface to Li Lushi's house in Linqiong, a winter banquet in Tang Dynasty: "the building is like a painting, near the city of the old country; the porch is like a cloud, the chariots and horses of the general capital."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : xuān gài rú yún
many officials and dignitaries
as like as an apple is to an oyster. jié rán bù tóng
cannot bear playing second fiddle. bù gān hòu rén
Seven broken and eight continued. qī duàn bā sù
Advance the virtuous and retreat the traitor. jìn xián tuì jiān
gradually enter blissful circumstances. jiàn rù jiā jìng