prosperous
Li è Li è h ō NGH ō ng is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Li è Li è h ō NGH ō ng, which means a huge sound. It describes the prosperity of the enterprise, and also describes the momentum and grandeur. It comes from the work of Qin yuan Chun and Yan Shan in the Yuan Dynasty by Wen Tianxiang of Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Sometimes the battle of defending Wuhan was really fierce.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: vigorous antonym: silent
The origin of Idioms
In the Song Dynasty, Wen Tianxiang wrote a poem in the spring of Qinyuan and a poem in the Yanshan Mountains during the Zhiyuan period: "life goes on and on, and the clouds die, so it's good to make a scene."
Idiom explanation
Fierce: the appearance of blazing fire; boom: onomatopoeia, to describe a huge sound. Describes the prosperity of a business. It also describes the great momentum and grandeur.
prosperous
Don't cover up when you return to your teacher. Don't chase after the poor - guī shī wù yǎn,qóng kòu wù zhuī
purchase popularity by claiming the good deeds of others as one 's own - lüě měi shì ēn
richly adorned or plainly dressed - nóng zhuāng dàn mò