happiest mortal alive
Shenxianzhongren, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh é nxi ā nzh ō NgR é n, which means a good name for a person with beautiful appearance and elegant manner. From the book of Jin, biography of Wang Gong.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of Jin, biography of Wang Gong:" Meng Chang peeped at it and sighed, "this is a true fairy."
Idiom story
During the Jin Dynasty, Wang Youjun was handsome and beautiful. Once he saw Du Hongzhi, his face looked like solidified white fat, his eyes were like black paint, and he praised him as a fairy. At that time, some people praised Wang Youjun for his beautiful appearance. They thought he was very beautiful. Cai Gong said, "I'm sorry you haven't seen Du Hongzhi."
Idiom usage
As an object, it refers to a person's appearance and temperament.
[example]:
In the anecdotes of Banqiao, written by Yu Huai in the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "day and night, constant wine and sound song, silk cloth and crane cloak are true."
Analysis of Idioms
It looks like a fairy
Antonym: ordinary people are not good-looking
happiest mortal alive
every person has his weak points as well as strong points - chǐ duǎn cù cháng
Buying cattle and selling Swords - mǎi niú mài jiàn
adopt a wrong method to save a situation and end up by making it worse - bào xīn jiù huǒ
keep up appearances and be wasteful - pū zhāng yáng lì