continuous mountains
The Chinese idiom, CH ó nglu á NDI é zh à ng in pinyin, means that the mountains are continuous. It comes from the picture of Huang jujuan in autumn.
Notes on Idioms
Mountains: continuous mountains.
The origin of Idioms
Xu Guangpu of the Tang Dynasty wrote the picture of the autumn mountain of Huang jujuan: "when autumn came, the imperial edict wrote about the autumn mountain, which was written among several pieces of light gauze. There was no potential left behind in the high and low directions, and there were so many mountains and so many beautiful faces."
Idiom usage
Examples
Zhongwu stayed in the garrison building day by day and burned candles at night. He painted many mountains for his friends. His pen and ink were serene and vivid. Those who knew him were convinced by his courage. Zhang Dai's family biography in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : chóng luán dié zhàng
continuous mountains
throw up one's sleeves and rise. tóu mèi ér qǐ
Looking to the East, you can't see the west wall. dōng xiàng ér wàng ,bù jiàn xī qiáng
There is no way to heaven, no way to earth. shàng tiān wú lù,rù dì wú mén
take up the positions of the fallen and rise to fight one after another. qián pú hòu bó
intense darkness without light. àn dàn wú guāng
To move Qi and nourish the body. jū yí qì,yǎng yí tǐ