magnificently superb
This is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is B ō L á NL ǎ och é ng, which means to describe the article as magnificent and sophisticated. It comes from ten rhymes of Zheng Jianyi.
Idiom explanation
Billows: waves, describe the ups and downs of the article; mature: refers to the article is very sophisticated.
The origin of Idioms
In his poem "ten rhymes to Zheng Jianyi", Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty said: "no regret, only mature."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as predicate; describes the majestic momentum of poetry. Examples love words are brilliant and successful. I respect sun Junyu. (Wang Ho's "modern world theory · tasting algae" in Qing Dynasty)
Idiom story
There is a story in Hua Jian Song Hua compiled by Tang of Yuan Dynasty. In the Song Dynasty, a painter named Xu you once painted a mural depicting the river on the wall behind the Buddha Hall of Taihe temple in Changzhou. It was titled "Qingji Guanhe". One of the murals was 40 feet long from beginning to end, which attracted special attention of the audience. Tang commented: "in fact, Xu you's beauty is not here. Because of his profound skill, skillful writing, continuous lines, like waves and ups and downs, combined with the water potential and influenced each other, he felt that the more he looked, the more strange he became. " Later, people use this idiom to describe the magnificent and powerful poetry.
Chinese PinYin : bō lán lǎo chéng
magnificently superb
not to distinguish black from white. zào bái bù fēn
mow the grass and pull out the roots. jiǎn cǎo chú gēn
one 's strength does not match one 's ambitions. lì bù cóng xīn
be good at deliberating and judging. néng móu shàn duàn