prettify
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ú zh ī m ǒ f ě n, meaning Rouge powder, refers to women's dressing, also refers to cover up the essence of ugliness. It's from "surprise at the second quarter of the story - Huang Gan sent by Jun Qiao of Zhao county.".
Idiom explanation
Rouge: rouge.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the book "surprise at the second quarter of the story - Huang Gan sent by Jun Qiao of Zhao county": "he was used to selling amorous feelings and teasing the rich man."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive, referring to dress up. When I look at the years of my works, the souls of these young people who are unwilling to paint are standing in front of me one by one. Lu Xun's Wild Grass: a sense. Dan Wei's green: "it's not like those hypocrites who have a good look. When they do harm to people, they have to paint on their faces and reprimand the victims."
prettify
the dragon had nine sons and each of them was different from the others—brothers born of the same parents differ from each other - lóng shēng jiǔ zǐ
Immersion irrigation of milled rice - mó lóng jìn guàn
allow private feelings to outweigh public duty - yǐ sī fèi gōng
a remarkable talent of many ages - kuàng shì qí cái