I'll stop
Hu Zhi Luan Ting, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ú zh ì Lu á NT í ng, which means to describe a person with dignified appearance and beautiful appearance. From the story of four sages: Hui mu.
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "the story of four sages · huimu": "look at his eyebrows, his forehead, and his swagger."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Hu Zhi, Luan Ting, Luan Hu Ting Shi
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Today, when my aunt kneels down to call me a cup, there is one son in ten, and there are many grandchildren in thirty. Luan Ting Hu Zhi, Qiong Fen Hui, is the most prosperous of the long branches. Preface to the 70th birthday mother by Yuan Hongdao in Ming Dynasty
I'll stop
pull up the rushes with their roots - bá máo lián rú