entertainment setups
Wu Xie Ge Lou, a Chinese idiom, is pronounced w ǔ Xi è g ē L ó u, which means a hall or terrace set up for song and dance entertainment. It generally refers to singing and dancing places. From "looking at the tide" and "saving the wind and dust".
Idiom explanation
Xie: a house built on a high platform. A hall or terrace set up for song and dance entertainment. It generally refers to singing and dancing places. It's the same as "dancing Pavilion and singing platform".
The origin of Idioms
Song and Tang Dynasty's "looking at the tide of the sea" CI: "Songyan old Pavilion, the city is high, the country, spare time dancing Pavilion." The second discount of Yuan Dynasty Guan Hanqing's "save the wind and dust": "every time he was forced to rob the mansion, how did he know that he destroyed the dance pavilion?"
Analysis of Idioms
Dance Pavilion
Idiom usage
Xiao miao'er is very romantic, and she is very beautiful. The fourth chapter of the Chan Zhen Yi Shi by Fang Ruhao in Ming Dynasty
entertainment setups
military forces can use insidious tactics - bīng xíng guǐ dào
use one's personality to influence others - jī bó tíng jiāo
blot out the sky and hide the earth - zhē tiān gài dì
ask for favours from relatives and friends - qiú qīn gào yǒu
stand by watching others battle - zuò bì shàng guān