magnificent houses
Yuyuqionglou, a Chinese idiom, is y ù y ǔ Qi ó NGL ó u in pinyin, which means the palace where immortals live in mythology and describes buildings covered with snow. From "niannujiao · looking out from high".
The origin of Idioms
Song Sushi's poem "niannujiao · overlooking from high" said: "yuyuqionglou, riding Luan to come and go, people in the cool country."
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; used of buildings, etc. example pearl window silver tile, suspected in Guanghan immortal mansion. In Qing Dynasty, Qiu Jin's Ci of "Qi Tian Le · Xue" and he Jingming's poem of "Chang E Tu" are as follows: "the jade tower is closed in early autumn, the Golden Toad and the jade rabbit cry in the cold night."
Chinese PinYin : yù yǔ qióng lóu
magnificent houses
be frightened out of one 's wits. pò sàn hún fēi
A postscript to the book of songs. dù jiǎn yí biān
exhaust all resources to build up one 's military power. wán bīng dú wǔ