many mountains
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ā NY á NW à NH è, which means to describe the continuous mountains, high and low overlap. It comes from the new words of the world.
The origin of Idioms
"Gu Changkang returned from Kuaiji, and people asked about the beauty of mountains and rivers. Gu Yun: "thousands of rocks compete for beauty, thousands of ravines compete for flow, and plants cover them like clouds and clouds." Later used to describe the mountains and valleys.
Idiom usage
It can be used as adverbial or object to describe the precipitous terrain. "Our pride" by Ye Shengtao: "the shape is strange, but it doesn't have the spirit of boundless and boundless."
Idiom story
During the Jin Dynasty, Gu Kaizhi, a famous calligrapher and painter, joined the army as the great Sima under the great general Huan Wen. They were very close. After the death of Huan Wen, Gu Kaizhi wrote a poem to commemorate: "where will the fish and birds depend when the mountains collapse and the sea is exhausted." Many people admire his literary talent and ask him to describe the scenery of Kuaiji. He said: "thousands of rocks compete for beauty, and thousands of valleys compete for current."
many mountains
men 's life is like boarding in this world - rén shēng rú jì
To suspend troops according to the law - àn jiǎ xiū bīng