have an imposing appearance
Qiyuxuanang is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Q ì y ǔ Xu ā n á ng. Style: bearing, spirit; Xuanang: energetic, unusual appearance. It means more to describe full of spirit and extraordinary spirit. It can also describe tall and straight plants, full of vigor and vitality. It's from tieweishan congtan.
Analysis of Idioms
He is full of energy and vigor; he is listless and dejected
The origin of Idioms
The third volume of the series of talks on tieweishan written by Cai Zao of Song Dynasty: "the book of Lin Zhongshu is Yan Zhenhe, who is dignified and dignified. He is as stupid as the emperor's mausoleum."
Idiom usage
Used as a compliment. It's very versatile. Generally used as predicate, attribute and adverbial. example volume 10 of "the surprise of making a case at the first carving": "Chaoxia sees that Hansheng is dignified and handsome, and his talent and appearance are very similar." In Ming Dynasty, Feng Menglong's Xingshi Hengyan: "he was born rich and graceful; he was dignified and dignified; he had the appearance of being out of the dust." Chapter 31 of three heroes and five righteousness by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty: I saw him with a purple complexion and a good beard. His complexion was bright, his beard was smooth and long, his body was big and dignified. Guo Moruo's poem the Yangtze River Bridge: "makes people open-minded and dignified." the house is very popular, which makes people look at it differently. When Zhuang Shaoguang saw that Xiao haoxuan was dignified and unconventional, he was really close to him. (Chapter 34 of scholars by Wu Jingzi of Qing Dynasty)
have an imposing appearance
The branches and leaves are scattered - zhī fēn yè sàn
rise up upon hearing the crow of a rooster and practise with the sword - wén jī qǐ wǔ
no one picks up what 's left by the wayside - dào bù jǔ yí