lifelike
Lifelike is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x ǔ x ǔ y ù Hu ó, which means lifelike. It means that the artistic image is very lifelike, just like the living one.
explain
It's still alive. It means that the artistic image is very lifelike, just like the living one.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Zhuangzi's Qi Wu Lun: "in the past, Zhuangzi's dream was Hu Die, which was vivid and vivid. It was a metaphor for his ambition and ambition! I don't know Zhou Ye. If you suddenly feel it, you will be at a loss. "
Discrimination of words
There are 49 bird magpies flying up and down, high and low, up and down, arranged in a formation, bent into a bridge shape, with two wings open, which are vivid. The 40th chapter of biography of flowers on the sea by Han Bangqing in Qing Dynasty
[pinyin code]: xxyh
Lifelike
usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial; used in writing
lifelike
promise and then deny in succession - chū ěr fǎn ěr
Paint the ground and carve the wood - huà dì kè mù
Though the day of death is the year of life - suī sǐ zhī rì,yóu shēng zhī nián