painting-in-poetry
There is a picture in the poem. Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ī zh ō ngy ǒ Uhu à, which means to describe a poem that is good at describing scenery, making readers feel like they are in the picture. Also describes the artistic conception of the poem is very beautiful. It comes from Dongpo's preface and postscript, shumojie's blue pass painting of misty rain.
The origin of Idioms
Su Shi of Song Dynasty wrote Dongpo's postscript, shumojie's picture of misty rain in the blue pass: "to taste Mojie's poems, there are pictures in them; to watch Mojie's paintings, there are poems in them."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate and object; with commendatory meaning
Examples
Looking at this sentence, the ancients' so-called "~" is really good. The 90th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
painting-in-poetry
a floating family and a drifting abode - fú jiā fàn zhái
Lick the skin and discuss the bone - shì pí lùn gǔ
not to injure the people in the least - qiū háo wú fàn
the music of the states of zheng and wei - zhèng wèi zhī yīn