be in the best of spirits
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ì ngzh ì B ó B ó, which describes the appearance of strong interest and high mood. It's from flowers in the mirror.
The origin of Idioms
In the 56th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen of Qing Dynasty, "when I went to the county, people thought that I would not go, but he was still full of enthusiasm and said," with the greatness of the Heavenly Kingdom, I don't think I have a great eye for literature. "
Idiom usage
Lu Xun's Nahuo Shexi: "I think it's interesting to see a play, especially in Beijing. So they all went to the garden with high spirits. The play had already started, and they had heard the sound of thumping outside. " Li Jieren's "big wave" has four chapters: "he turned and walked into the ear door. He was tired enough, and excitedly called his wangu'er:" my noisy tit! Come and change my father's shoes! " Wei Wei's "fire phoenix" 25: "there is a 27-8-year-old soldier in the middle, who is excitedly talking to them, and the crowd is raising bursts of laughter from time to time." The nightingale is still singing happily, but the guerrillas already know the meaning of the song. the whole class had already gathered together and set out for the wild tour with great interest. He told me excitedly that he would go shopping together tomorrow.
be in the best of spirits
one cannot shirk responsibility for one 's crimes - zuì zé nán táo
Break through the strong and destroy the sharp - chōng jiān huǐ ruì
something redundant and not needed - fù zhuì xiàn yóu