range upon range of mountains
The Chinese idiom, CH ó nglu á NDI é zh à ng in pinyin, means continuous mountains, one after another. It comes from Xu Guangpu's picture of Huang jujuan in autumn.
The origin of Idioms
Xu Guangpu of the Tang Dynasty wrote the picture of the autumn mountain of Huang jujuan: "when autumn came, I wrote about the autumn mountain in a few pieces of light gauze. There was no force left behind in the high and low directions, and the heavy mountains were so fragile."
Idiom usage
As subject, object and attribute, the mountain is continuous. In Zhu Ziqing's Switzerland: "there are many mountains in the Alps, so you can't be poor." Ye Shengtao's Suzhou garden: "it's all about the life experience of the designers and craftsmen. Only when there are hills in their heart can tourists forget the city of Suzhou and feel like they are in the mountains." Standing on the top of the Jade Emperor of Mount Tai, looking into the distance, you can see the magnificent mountains.
Chinese PinYin : chóng luán dié zhàng
range upon range of mountains
trifling pecuniary assistance. dǒu shēng zhī shuǐ
the kindness of caring for -- saying of the sons for their parents ' kindness. gù fù zhī ēn
give up completely to natural impulse. zì xīn zòng yù