bonfires display
Yinhuahuoshu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í nhu ā Hu ǒ sh ù, which means to refer to brilliant fireworks or lights. It comes from the trace of flowers and moon by Wei xiuren in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the fourth chapter of Hua Yue Chen written by Wei xiuren of the Qing Dynasty: "at dusk, the city is bright with silver flowers and flaming trees."
Analysis of Idioms
Fire tree and silver flower
Idiom usage
It is used as subject, object and attribute to describe the lights on holiday night
Chinese PinYin : yín huā huǒ shù
bonfires display
make up one 's face heavily and dress gaudily. nóng zhuāng yàn guǒ
a pleasure which would cost one nothing. huì ér bù fèi
straight talks invite disaster. zhí yán qǔ huò
The wolf and the sheep feed together. láng yáng tóng sì