Zhu Yan lvfa
Zhu Yan lvfa, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ū y á NL ǜ f à, which means to describe youth. It comes from the Song Dynasty's Shen Fu's poem "send sentence to judge Yingchuan".
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Shen Fu's poem "send a sentence to judge Yingchuan" said: "Zhuyan green sends out dust, and long tassels give birth to the wind."
Idiom usage
In Song Dynasty, Shen Fu's poem "send sentence to judge Yingchuan" reads: "Zhu Yan Lu sends out dust, and long Ying Gao gives birth to breeze." Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty wrote the 42nd chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "when Song Jiang looked at the girl, he saw that she had green hair and bright teeth and bright eyes." Zhu Yan's green hair is not old, and his talent is ten times as good as his land. A poem by Sun Hua of the Qing and Tang Dynasties
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Zhu Yan green temples, Zhu Yan cuifa
Zhu Yan lvfa
board is erected in the transportation hub for people to write comments - fěi bàng zhī mù
both intelligent and courageous - zhì yǒng jiān quán
Life is filled with dangerous temptations. - ní chuán dù hé
put a round peg in a square hole - fāng ruì huán záo
talk in a wild disorderly manner - hú shuō luàn dào
lofty ridges and towering mountains - chóng shān jùn lǐng