magnificent houses
Beique pearl palace, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B è iqu è zh ū g ō ng, which means a palace made of Pearl babies and describes a gorgeous house. It comes from "Nine Songs · Hebo" written by Chu Quyuan in the Warring States period.
The origin of Idioms
In the book "Nine Songs · Hebo" written by Qu Yuan in the Warring States period, it is said that "the fish scale house comes to the Dragon hall, and the purple shell palace comes to the Zhu palace."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: resplendence antonym: pengmenhu
Idiom usage
You can see the incense burning tripod, the purple mist rippling, the jade building and the golden palace, just like the scenery of the heavenly palace. (qingchangsheng by Wu Mingshi in Ming Dynasty, the fourth fold)
magnificent houses
make a quick decision as situation demands - zhuàng shì jiě wàn
so that there is no end [ of our toils - mí suǒ dǐ zhǐ
become aware of one 's errors and turn back from one 's wrong path - mí ér zhī fǎn