Beauty (mbosh è ng sh! U), China idiom, definition: There are many beautiful things, but they can't be seen at the moment.
Source: Yuan Mei's Poems with the Garden in the Qing Dynasty, Volume III: "He has a drink in his spare time, holding the complete works of assistant ministers and begging for a preface. After a long leisure time, I dug it up and found it rich and beautiful. "
Usage: subject-predicate type, as predicate, attribute and complement.
Sentence-making: Various handicrafts displayed in the exhibition hall are dazzling. Fuhai Lake is surrounded by mountains, surrounded by water, and the lakes and mountains are beautiful. ?
Synonym: dazzling.
A dazzling array of things: exquisite jade, which means that the eyes are full of beautiful jade and describe many beautiful things (mostly books or handicrafts).
Source: Liu Yiqing in the Southern Dynasties, Shi Shuo Xin Yu Rong Zhi: "I saw many beautiful things during my trip today."
Usage: used in recognition.
When Xiao Ming first went to town, he was stunned by the dazzling array of goods in the shop.
Antonym: ugly
Ugliness is an idiom in China. The pinyin is bù kān rù mù, which means that the image is ugly and people can't stand it.
Source: Li Qing Ruzhen's "Mirror Flower Edge" Twenty-third time: "This number of dishes also hinders gentlemen."
Usage: verb-object type; As predicate and attribute; Describe a low-level and dirty scene.
Sentence making: However, due to the low aesthetic level, there are often some strange clothes.
Refer to the above? Baidu encyclopedia-beautiful