one's eyes brimming with radiating vigour
Jiongjiongyoushen, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǒ ngji ǒ ngy ǒ ush é n, which means people's eyes are bright and energetic. It comes from the biography of LV Yaqing in Jingye, a collection of idle lives by Li Kaixian of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Li Kaixian's biography of LV Yaqing in Jingye, a collection of idle dwellings in the Ming Dynasty, said: "Mr. Wang has a round and broad head, a plump body, a childlike face in Haikou, and a bright eye in the aspect of wheel and ear. Although he has a whole face, he has few different ears."
Idiom usage
He is a young man of ambition. He is formal, object, attributive and adverbial, with commendatory meaning, examples and bright eyes. And Shen Shixi's the last battle elephant's bright eyes.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: bright eyes, bright eyes, shining, energetic, shining; Antonyms: dim, colorless eyes, expressionless face, dull, listless
one's eyes brimming with radiating vigour
The sea and the boar look at each other - hài shǐ xiāng wàng
the buffaloes in jiangsu pant when they see the moon mistaking it for the hot sun - wú niú chuǎn yuè
cannot bear to part from each other - nán fēn nán shě