Yaotai Yinque
Yaotai Yinque, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y á ot á iy í nqu è, which means the ornate buildings and palaces. Most of them refer to the residence of immortals. It comes from the story of pipa, moon watching in Mid Autumn Festival.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Gaoming's the story of pipa, the moon in the Mid Autumn Festival: "the fragrance of Osmanthus fragrans is clear, the thought is cool, people are in Yaotai Yinque."
Idiom usage
Chapter 44 of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty: "ramble on the accounts of Qin palace and Han Dynasty, the Yinque of Yaotai."
Yaotai Yinque
hide one 's candle under a bushel - fēng máng bù lù
wet by the rain and burnt by the sun - yǔ lín rì zhì
elevate one 's body and flying away - bái rì shàng shēng