shang
Haohaotangtang is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is h à oh à OSH à ngsh à ng, which means that it originally describes the vast water potential. After describing the broad growth of things, or the huge flow of people forward. From Yueyang Tower and Shangshu Yaodian.
Idiom explanation
It used to describe the vast water potential. After describing the broad growth of things, or the huge flow of people forward.
Idioms and allusions
"Shangshu · Yaodian" says: "the flood of Tang and Tang was cut, and the Huaishan and Xiangling mountains were swaying, and the sky was vast." Fan Zhongyan, Song Dynasty, wrote in Yueyang Tower: "the vast soup is boundless."
Word usage
When the great river flows out of the Three Gorges, the bottom pillar, galloping and conflicting in the plain, it is vast and powerful. Xue Fucheng's on the trend of Russia's founding in Qing Dynasty
shang
so poor as to have no room to stick an awl on - pín wú zhì zhuī
all kinds of corruptions creep in - bǎi bì cóng shēng
Playing with the year and the moon - wán suì yī yuè
seek a moment 's peace however one can - gǒu qiě tōu ān