rise and dance in a happy mood
Dancing, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is pi ā NPI ā NQ ǐ w ǔ, which describes dancing lightly. From the book of songs · Xiaoya · Si mu.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Xiaoya · four peonies": "those who are dancing are flying and carrying."
Idiom usage
Li Bai's Gaogouli in Tang Dynasty: "dancing with wide sleeves, like birds coming from the East." 2. Yin Qian's "boys are not" bad "and girls don't love": "I don't know if you find that there is a phenomenon in life. When you go shopping, you often see some very humble young men and a graceful and charming young lady walking around the shop hand in hand, which makes people envious. Once you go to a dance hall, a recognized "bad" boy can always invite the most beautiful girl to dance. There are also some people who seem to be refined [sour grapes if you can't eat grapes], sarcastically saying: "it's a pity that flowers are put on cow dung. 】”
Analysis of Idioms
Singing and dancing
rise and dance in a happy mood
drift about without any definite trace like running water or duckweed - làng jì píng zōng
Beat the hub and rub the shoulder - jī gǔ mó jiān
kindly in appearance but unfathomable at heart - hòu mào shēn cí
draw a clear demarcation between whom or what to hate or love - ài zēng fēn míng
veteran soldiers and able captains - jīng bīng qiáng jiàng