its brightness dazzles the eyes
Brilliant, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Gu ā NGC ǎ IDU ó m ù, which means bright and dazzling. It is also used to describe the high achievements of some works of art and artistic images. It comes from the seven signatures of Yunji.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] brilliant, dazzling, bright color [antonym] dim, eclipsed
Idiom usage
When you untie it, you can see a ball of cotton wrapped in a bright night pearl. Ling Mengchu, Ming Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Junfang's "seven signatures of Cloud Collection" in the Song Dynasty, volume 113: "it is the order that the left and right leads to the view in the palace, and the jade platform and green trees are dazzling."
Idiom story
In the Western Jin Dynasty, Shi Chong, the governor of Jingzhou, accumulated a lot of wealth by robbing foreign businessmen. He was transferred to the capital as a guard and squandered. Wang Kai, the uncle of Emperor Wu of Jin Dynasty, also tried his best to be extravagant and wasteful, trying to compare with Shi Chong. Wang Kai was very proud to get a coral and got it to Shi Chong's home. Shi Chong took out six or seven dazzling corals and gave them to him. Wang Kai sighed that he was inferior to others.
its brightness dazzles the eyes
The fish is broken and the birds are scattered - yú kuì niǎo sàn
set up a separatist regime by force of arms - hǔ jù jīng tūn