Silver screen and golden house
Yinpingjinwu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í NP í NGJ ī NW ū, which means to describe the extremely gorgeous houses and furnishings, by referring to the rich family. From Ding Fengbo.
The origin of Idioms
Gong Zizhen's poem "dingfengbo" in Qing Dynasty: "in the house of silver screen and gold, for example, Qihua is not planted in front of the threshold."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. The 21st chapter of Tao Zhenhuai's Tian Yu Hua in Qing Dynasty: "if you look at it like this, how can you be a man of silver screen and golden house?"
Silver screen and golden house
a country finally falls after its territory has been nibbled away - shì kāng jí mǐ
embarrassed by undeserved praise - kuì bù gǎn dāng
two families are linked up through marriage - èr xìng zhī hǎo
Words are endless, but meanings are endless - yán yǒu jìn ér yì wú qióng