graceful and handsome like a bird spreading its wings or a pheasant showing off its resplendent feather in flight -- descriptive of buildings
Bird flies, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ni ǎ og é Hu ī f ē I, meaning as if a bird opens its wings and a pheasant flies. In the old days, it was used to describe the magnificent palace. From the book of songs. Xiaoya. Skan.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Xiao Ya · Si Gan:" such as bird Si Ge, such as Hui Si Fei. "
Idiom usage
The palace is gorgeous. The bird flies, which is the perfection of creation. In Qing Dynasty, Cheng Yunsheng's "the palace of learning from the forest of children" and Zhu Xi's biography: "its pillars rise like a bird's warning, its eaves are elegant, its wings are straightened like a Hui's flying, and the beauty of its hall is so beautiful."
Analysis of Idioms
Diaolianghuadong
graceful and handsome like a bird spreading its wings or a pheasant showing off its resplendent feather in flight -- descriptive of buildings
howling winds and driving rains ; violent conflicts - jí fēng zhòu yǔ