a refined pleasure of poetic minds
Elegant and pure, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ǎ R é NQ ī ngzh ì, which means to describe people's good manners. The same as "elegant and profound". It comes from Liang Zhangju's "a continuation of the story of the waves: not food list".
Idiom explanation
It describes a person's good manners. The same as "elegant and profound".
The origin of Idioms
Source: Liang Zhangju's "no food list" in Qing Dynasty: "the method of cooking in Suiyuan food list is always delicious vegetables, and there is no mountain and sea treasures, so it is elegant and elegant."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of a person's speech or behavior
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: elegant and profound
Chinese PinYin : yǎ rén qīng zhì
a refined pleasure of poetic minds
There are many places of origin. fēn fēn jí jí
a good sword remains always sharp. bǎo dāo bù lǎo
sudden spurt of vitality prior to collapse. huí guāng fǎn zhào
swords , spears , two-edged swords and halberds -- all kinds of ancient weapons. dāo qiāng jiàn jǐ
crane one's neck to look forward. yǐn lǐng ér wàng