Yujianxiangpin
Yujianxiangpin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ù Ji ǎ nxi ā ngxi ā o, meaning beauty's emaciation and dispiritness. It comes from Han Gong Chun by Zhang Xian of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Xian of the Song Dynasty wrote a poem in Han Gong Chun: "jade has been sold by incense, but I was mistakenly mistaken by Chan Juan, and I am languid in the mirror."
Idiom explanation
It refers to the beauty's emaciation and dispiritness.
Analysis of Idioms
Yu Jian Xiang Xiao
Idiom usage
Use: as predicate, attribute; used in written language example dark red foil, cold rain and steep wind, try to sell Luoyi jade. Song of red embroidered shoes in spring by Ren Yu in Yuan Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : yù jiǎn xiāng xiāo
Yujianxiangpin
be soaked in a dark liquid without becoming back. niè ér bù zī
iron walls and brass partitions. tiě bì tóng qiáng
lacking the necessary materials one cannot accomplish one 's intentions. wú mǐ zhī chuī