steep precipices and cliffs
Cliff, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xu á NY á Ju é B ì, describes the steep mountain. From Fang Ji's autumn of the Three Gorges.
The origin of Idioms
Fang Ji's autumn of the Three Gorges: "climbing up the cliff, I hear the call of tigers and leopards."
Idioms and allusions
Liu Changqing of the Tang Dynasty wrote Xu Fazhen, a Taoist in Longshan mountain: "the cliffs are thousands of feet high, and the green roses are curling up." "Maoshan, Tiantai, Siming, Xiandu, Weiyu, Wuyi, Huotong and Luofu are all traversed. It's all over the cliffs. People can't find a place to go. It says, "Xu Qi came here from Emei to find Yan yuezi." "Outlaws of the marsh" 86 back: "when people hit a look, all around the mountains, around the cliffs, only to see high mountains, no road to climb." "The wild old man exposed the speech" 63 times: "walk about 10 or 20 miles, already to the foot of the mountain, but it is cliff, no way to go."
Discrimination of words
A cliff
Idiom usage
The mountain is steep
Examples
However, it is the pine trees that bring people's soul to a lofty state. They are not afraid of the high mountains and stick their roots in the crevices of the cliffs. Their bodies are twisted like dragon pillars. Li Jianwu's climbing Mount Tai in the rain
Chinese PinYin : xuán yá jué bì
steep precipices and cliffs
A tired bird knows how to return. juàn niǎo zhī huán
There are many branches and leaves. zhī bù yè fēn
Deep-rooted habits are hard to give up.. jī xí nán chú
Great achievements and great virtues. fēng gōng mào dé