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Shuimu Qinghua is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Shu ǐ m ù Q ī nghu á, which originally means to describe the scenery of yuanjiashan, the Minister of Ming military department in suixian County, Henan Province. It means that the landscape is clear and beautiful. The original word comes from daozang Jiyao of Qing Dynasty and takes its meaning from youxichi.
The origin of Idioms
Peng Dingqiu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the collection of daozang · Biji · summary of Lu Zu's miracles · in Lu Zhaoxiang: "there is yuanjiashan in Xiangyi, and Yuan Ke, the Minister of the Ming military department, is in luyuandi. Surrounded by forests and trees, towering rock gullies, water and wood, Qinghua, landscape more than Zhuojin. Chunyang hall was built on the top. He said, "I feel confused in my dream.".
Xie Hun, Jin Dynasty, wrote a poem about the journey to the West pool: "Jingchen songbird collection, Shuimu Zhanqing."
Idiom usage
It refers to the clear and beautiful landscape of the garden
Examples
Recently, a bigger garden has been built outside the South City, leading the water from Sanli River into the garden. It's really a pleasure to enter the garden as if you were in a scenic spot in the south of the Yangtze River. Yao xueyin's Li Zicheng, Volume 2, chapter 29
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fit in exactly with one's wishes - zhèng zhòng xià huái
use impractical means to solve a problem - jié zhǐ shì lǚ