take on an altogether new aspect
Chinese Idioms,
Pinyin is Hu à NR á NY à x à n,
Definition: refers to changing the old appearance, showing a new look.
Citation explanation
Change the old appearance and create a new atmosphere.
Zhang Yanyuan of Tang Dynasty wrote in his famous paintings of the past dynasties: on identification, collection, purchase, reading and play: "it has the famous works of Jin and Song Dynasties, and looks like a new one. It has gone through hundreds of years, and the paper color has not been defeated."
Li Zhiyi of the Song Dynasty, collected works of Guxi residents, records of Tianxi temple's newly built FA Tang: "building the kitchen of Monk Tang again It's a new look. "
Lu You of Song Dynasty wrote notes of Lao xue'an (Volume 8): at the end of Xuanhe period, there were 30000 large commercial buildings decorated with Sizhou Puzhao pagoda.
Chapter 11 of Chen Chen's Water Margin: according to Chinese law, he made a new flag.
The fifth and third chapter of a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: the door god, couplet and listing were changed in the two mansions, and the Taofu was renewed.
Fan Yang inquired in the Qing Dynasty about the rebuilding of yuanjiashan stele: "at that time, all the officials of the Liao Dynasty wrote couplets and inscribed their respective titles. Outside the Yanqi hall, the appearance of the temple (yuan Keli's other business) took on a new look."
Mao Dun's "journey to Nanguan in Changchun" said: "today's things are all changed in one night."
Analysis of Idioms
words whose meaning is similar
Fresh and refreshing
antonym
It's the same as before
Idiom usage
It is formal, predicate, object and commendatory
take on an altogether new aspect
kill the chicken to frighten the monkey - shā jī xià hóu
Cucurbitaceae is connected with Cucurbitaceae - guā gě xiāng lián
attachment to the things and people related to a loved one - wū wū zhī ài
gain victory with unstained swords - jūn bù xuè rèn