Huaizhukaiyu
Huaizhufuyu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin Hu á izh ū y ù NY ù, means to describe huaizang's talent and virtue. From Wen Fu.
The origin of Idioms
In Lu Ji's Wen Fu of Jin Dynasty, it is said that "the jade in the stone is shining on the mountain, and the Pearl in the water is charming on the river." Later, he used the metaphor of "huaizhu Kaiyu" to describe huaizang's talent and virtue. "Huaizhukaiyu" refers to huaizang's talent and virtue.
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences. example fortunately, I can avoid people in the river and lake, and I have no dust in my heart. Song Dynasty: Yang Wanli's poem "feeling of eating Laoling"
Huaizhukaiyu
be guilty of a crime for which one deserves to die ten thousand deaths - zuì gāi wàn sǐ
have sufficient grounds for one 's views - chí zhī yǒu gù
run the country well and give the people peace and security - zhì guó ān mín
use the past to attack the present - yǐ gǔ fēi jīn
the ornamental and the combined plain properties - wén zhì bīn bīn