blandishments
Qiaoyuhuayan is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Qi ǎ oy ǔ Hu ā y á n, which means words or words that are extravagantly modified without actual content. Today, it mostly refers to false and beautiful words. From the romance of the Western chamber.
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of the third volume of the romance of the Western chamber by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty: "Zhang Sheng is the gift of a brother and sister. How dare you do that?" You've got to talk to people. "
Idiom usage
Chapter 33 of Wu Chengen's journey to the West in Ming Dynasty: the strange and ingenious words, the hypocritical way: "master, there is a quiet temple in Shanxi. I am a Taoist in that temple." In the seventh chapter of a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "besides, I'm afraid that he will borrow some hairpin rings and clothes from you as capital." Lu Xun's grave: on the fall of Leifeng Pagoda again: elegant people, believers and traditional masters must work hard to make up for ten scenes.
blandishments
When a man is dying, his words are good - rén zhī jiāng sǐ,qí yán yě shàn
attend to one 's parents ' comfort on getting up and going to bed - chén hūn dìng xǐng
Rootless wood, water without source - wú gēn zhī mù,wú yuán zhī shuǐ
the sight of familiar objects fills one with infinite melancholy - dǔ wù xīng qíng
He who knows current affairs is a hero - shí shí wù zhě wéi jùn jié