Gaoliang Wenxiu
Gaoliang Wenxiu is a Chinese idiom, pronounced g ā Oli á NGW é nxi ù, which refers to the luxurious life of rich people. It also refers to fine and valuable things.
allusion
It comes from the Warring States period. Mencius · Gaozi Shang written by Mencius Ke: "the poem says:" drunk with wine, full with virtue. " The speech is full of benevolence and righteousness, so it is not the taste of the original person's Gao Liang; the reputation is given to the body, so it is not the taste of the original person's Wen Xiu. " Zhao Qi notes: "Gaoliang, fine Liang, such as paste also; Wenxiu, embroider clothes also.".
explain
The luxurious life of a wealthy family. It also refers to fine and valuable things. Gao Liang: fat meat and fine grain, refers to delicious food. Wenxiu: embroidered silk fabrics or clothes. It means delicious food and fancy clothes.
Discrimination of words
Although my nephew is young, I don't know what the article is, but when I read it carefully, it's a hundred times more popular than it is. A dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty
Gaoliang Wenxiu
drive one 's friends to the side of the enemy - wèi cóng qū què
the influences of western culture and civilization - ōu fēng měi yǔ
gorgeously wrought -- colourfully and dazzlingly embellished - cuò cǎi lòu jīn
outwardly strong but inwardly weak - wài qiáng zhōng gān