Shu Brocade and Wu Ling
Shu Jin Wu Ling, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ǔ J ǐ NW ú L í ng, which means all kinds of exquisite silk fabrics. From journey to the West.
Idiom explanation
Shu Brocade: colorful brocade produced in Sichuan; Wu Ling: a kind of silk, originally from Wujun.
The origin of Idioms
The eighty second chapter of journey to the West written by Wu Chengen of Ming Dynasty: "the breeze moves at the beginning, and the silk of Shu Brocade and Wu Ling is unfolded; the drizzle is collected, and the delicate drops show the quality of ice flesh and jade."
Analysis of Idioms
Qi Wan and Lu Hao
Idiom usage
As the subject, object, attribute; refers to silk.
Examples
The breeze is beginning to move, and the silk of Shu Brocade and Wu Ling is spreading gently; the drizzle is just closing, and the delicate drops show the ice flesh jade quality. A journey to the west by Wu Chengen in Ming Dynasty chapter 82
Yuan Tang style "a flower for a beautiful woman" divertimento: "the price is as heavy as Qi Wan and Lu Yi, and the name is as high as Shu Brocade and Wu Ling."
Chinese PinYin : shǔ jǐn wú líng
Shu Brocade and Wu Ling
valiant and heroic in bearing. yīng zī sà shuǎng
Mud Bodhisattva crossing the river. ní pú sà guò jiāng
one 's words are obeyed , and one 's plans are followed out sb . 's advice and adopt his plan. yán xíng jì cóng
go through the ceremonies of appointing a commander-in-chief. zhù tán bài jiàng