be all smiles
Smile with happy eyes, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m é Ihu ā NY ǎ nxi à o, which means to describe very excited and happy. It's from "the fate of love - refusing to marry".
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] smile with flying eyes, smile with smiling eyes and [antonym] sad face
The origin of Idioms
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the book "the fate of love, refusing to marry" that "if you talk about CAI Lang's name, I'm afraid you two will have to smile."
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate, adverbial; with commendatory meaning. Chapter 31 of the wizard of Oz by Li Baichuan in Qing Dynasty: "one by one, smile and see how the two fight." When he talks about the achievements of his children, he smiles.
be all smiles
disclaim all achievements one has made - gōng chéng bù jū
addicted to drinking , smoking , etc. - wǔ dú jù quán
do something perfunctorily as a routing practice - gù shuò xì yáng
Pass five passes and cut six generals - guò wǔ guān,zhǎn liù jiàng
like a general wind flow back to snow - liú fēng huí xuě