pavilions , terraces and open halls
Pavilion, a Chinese word, Pinyin is l ó UG é t í NGT á I, which means tall and beautiful buildings. It comes from Qingbo biezhi.
The origin of Idioms
In the volume of Qing Bo BIE Zhi written by Zhou Fei of Song Dynasty, "when he was young, he also got a poem saying:" Cuiwei temple is originally a Cuiwei palace, with ten pavilions and pavilions. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of buildings
Examples
Hesitant, back to the attic pavilions, involving several calendar. Pu Songling in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Pavilions and pavilions
pavilions , terraces and open halls
one 's eyes burn and one 's ears glow - yǎn xíng ěr rè
Talk about misfortunes and blessings - wàng tán huò fú
estimate one 's own moral and material strength - duó dé liàng lì
The top down and the bottom down - dǎo guàn luò pèi
it is better to be the bill of a chicken than the anus of an ox. - jī kǒu niú hòu