as brilliant as the sun , the moon and the stars
Bing Ruo RI Xing, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǐ ngru ò R ì x ī ng, which means bright as the sun, moon and stars, with "Bing Ruo RI Xing". From Qingbo magazine.
The origin of Idioms
In the volume of Qingbo magazine by Zhou Fei of Song Dynasty, it is said that in the reign of benevolent emperor, the talents such as wenzhenggong, wenzhonggong and Shilu were all first-class people. They were well-known in the history of the country and were as brilliant as stars. At the beginning, they were praised
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used to praise a person. Chapter 19 of the complete biography of a flying dragon written by Wu Yu in Qing Dynasty: "today, I see my brother's mind, as bright as the sun and as strict as frost and dew. I can't make it."
as brilliant as the sun , the moon and the stars
blow on an instrument or finger a stringed instrument - pǐn zhú tiáo sī
search for the origin and the outcome of the development of things - yuán shǐ fǎn zhōng
a man should take a wife and a woman should take a husband - nán hūn nǚ pìn
feel very depressed at the prospect - fǔ jǐng shāng qíng