partly hidden and partly visible
Ruo Yin Ruo Xian is a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is Ru ò y ǐ NRU ò Xi à n, which means indistinct and unclear. It comes from Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio, pearl.
Analysis of Idioms
If you have a synonym, you can see it vaguely; if you have an antonym, you can see it clearly and clearly
The origin of Idioms
Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio pearl in the Qing Dynasty: "when Li Jing is interrogated by Fang Jiang, he can see that he is looming, in a trance, like smoke, and has already boarded the couch."
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, attributive and adverbial. It can be used to describe vague memory. example the house is shrouded in fog, and the trees in the distance are indistinct.
partly hidden and partly visible
Tiger crouching and dragon leaping - hǔ wò lóng tiào
the weather in autumn is as hot as in summer - qiū xíng xià líng