beautiful tresses of a woman
Wu Bin Feng servant girl, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ù B ì NF ē nghu á n, which means to describe the beauty of women's hair, and also to describe women's hair fluffy and messy. It comes from Cheng Yong's new work Jingting, which is a poem about punishment.
Idiom explanation
Sideburns: hair beside the face near the ear; servant girls: ringlets.
The origin of Idioms
In the Song Dynasty, Fan Chengda's new Jing Ting, Cheng Yongzhi's poems are full of lace, mist, maid, cloud, clothes and moon
Idiom usage
To describe the beauty of a woman's hair. Example: in Su Shi's poem entitled "the privet of Mao", it is said that "the wind at the temples, the maid of wood, the clothes on the leaves, and the good mountains and rivers are not the people of the past." If you don't talk about it, you can't afford to be a servant girl. Liang Shaoren's essays on two kinds of Qiuyu nunnery in Qing Dynasty
beautiful tresses of a woman
high position and handsome salary - gāo wèi hòu lù
fan out from as an example for the rest of the lot to follow - yǐ diǎn dài miàn
Carve the spleen and the kidney - juān pí zhuó shèn