Shanjiezao
Shanjiezao, a Chinese idiom, is sh ā NJI é Z ǎ ozhu ō in pinyin, which means the temple ornaments of the ancient emperor. Later, it is used to describe the luxury of residence and the illegal rites of Yue. From the book of rites Ming Tang Wei.
Idiom explanation
Mountain Festival, carved into a mountain shaped Dougong; algae, painted with algae on the beam short column.
The origin of Idioms
Ming Tang Wei in the book of Rites The temple decoration of the son of heaven. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in architecture, etc. Example: in the Analects of Confucius, gongzhichang: "Zang Wenzhong lives in CAI, but he is a man of great virtue." If you use it as a kind of official, you can still see ridicule. Then the house of the common people should be a white house. "Riwenlu" by Li Dan in Yuan Dynasty
Shanjiezao
big and irregular timber has no use - cái dà nán yòng
have no idea what to do with one 's hands and feet - shǒu zú wú cuò
The tree is tall and the leaves fall to their roots - shù gāo qiān zhàng,yè luò guī gēn
be exploited unceasingly and become more and more impoverished - rì xuē yuè juān