Yao huanyu'er
Yao Huan yu'er, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á Ohu á NY ú ě R, which means to refer to children who are as beautiful as jade. It comes from the epitaph of Ma Jun, the young supervisor in the palace.
Idiom explanation
Yao: beautiful jade; Huan: jade ring; Yu: beautiful jade; Er: earrings made of jade.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu's epitaph of Ma Jun, the young supervisor in the palace, said: "the young son is graceful and quiet, the Yao is surrounded by Yu Er, and LAN Zhuo's teeth are called his family."
Idiom usage
Used as subject, object, attribute; used to praise others.
Chinese PinYin : yáo huán yú ěr
Yao huanyu'er
manage one 's work easily and leisurely. cuò zhì yù rú
recognize the whole through observation of the part. chǔ qì ér yǔ
be together morning and night. zhāo xī xiāng chǔ
If you go deep into the water. ruò shè yuān shuǐ