be exquisitely dainty and ravishingly beautiful
Qianjiaobaimei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NJI ā ob ǎ im è I, which means to describe a beautiful woman's posture. From zaqu and Youxian cave.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Chen Xuling's zaqu poem: "green, black and red are in two phases, and a thousand beauties and a hundred emotions are endless." In Tang Dynasty, Zhang Wencheng's "Youxian Grottoes", it is said that "a thousand beauties and a hundred beauties can't be compared with each other; weak body and light body can't be fully prepared."
Idiom usage
The third part of Yuan Wumingshi's Yuanyang quilt: "I think this woman's life is very charming, and she is not a mean person." The first part of Yuan Wu Ming Shi's poem "Ode to Chibi in drunken writing" says: "he was born in a charming and charming way. He was more speechless than flowers and less fragrant than jade." Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty (Volume 28): Wu yamen looks at miss he carefully under the lamp, and feels more charming. The first act of Xia Yan's fascist bacteria: "this Miss Qian Ba, who ranks eighth, is really beautiful. I don't exaggerate my words. She is really charming."
be exquisitely dainty and ravishingly beautiful
Though the day of death is the year of life - suī sǐ zhī rì,yóu shēng zhī nián
recover one 's original simplicity - fǎn pǔ huán zhēn
prevent divulgence of one's secrets - shā rén miè kǒu
have no sense of gratitude and justice - gū ēn bèi yì