be overjoyed
This is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is é sh ǒ uxi ā ngq ì ng, which means to put your hand on your forehead to express happiness. It's from Song bin Suo Hua Lu Shuangyue.
The origin of Idioms
In the song bin Suo Hua Lu Shuangyue written by Wang Tao in Qing Dynasty, "the mud and gold are high, the neighborhood is noisy, and the court is crowded. I'm very happy to be told, and my forehead and hands celebrate each other. "
Idiom usage
As object, predicate, attribute and adverbial, it instructs people to do fast things. Example: when the military affairs are completed, we have to apply for reimbursement of military expenses. We all celebrate with our hands. " In Gao Yang's complete biography of Hu Xueyan, a businessman on the red roof, the soldiers all celebrate the fact that they do not resist the general's stepping down and change people on the peak. Lu Xun's the refutation of the false book of freedom
Chinese PinYin : é shǒu xiāng qìng
be overjoyed
be near to worthies and keep away from mean fellows. qīn xián yuǎn nìng
bear a deep grudge against sb.. shēn chóu dà hèn
with one 's face flushed and one 's ears hot. miàn hóng ěr rè
ready to accept either course. mó léng liǎng duān