Intoxicated
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ù h ā NSH é nzu ì, describes the beautiful scenery is intoxicating. It is also used to describe the intoxication of scenery after drunk. From the West Lake by Yuan Hongdao of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Hongdao of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his first visit to the West Lake: "the scenery of the mountain is like e, the flowers are like cheeks, the wind is like wine, and the waves are like silk. When I raise my head, I can't feel intoxicated."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used to appreciate scenery
Intoxicated
Same name but different reality - míng tóng shí yì
a disciple who has not taken lessons directly under the master himself - sī shū dì zǐ
Gather the bone and blow the soul - liǎn gǔ chuí hún