a fine view of the mountain
Qianyanjingxiu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NY á NJ ì ngxi ù, which means that the scenery of mountains seems to compare with each other, describing beautiful mountain scenery. It comes from the new words of the world.
Idiom explanation
Rock: cliff; competition: competition.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in his new sayings of the world: "thousands of rocks compete for beauty, thousands of valleys compete for flow, and plants are covered on them, like clouds and clouds."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attribute to describe the beautiful mountain scenery. example thousands of valleys compete for the best, thousands of rocks compete for the best. Birds sing, but trees smell. The 17th chapter of journey to the west by Wu Chengen in Ming Dynasty
a fine view of the mountain
the very fowls and dogs have no peace - jī quǎn bù níng
One will get nowhere if he lacks single-mindedness and perseverance. - duō qí wáng yáng