1, crash and burn, Chinese idiom, pinyin is yù shí jù fén, which means that beautiful jade is like a stone burning, and it is a metaphor for good luck and bad luck. Interpretation from "Shang" and "Fire Gang, Jade and Stone Are Burned": The fire will burn us and we will die together.
2, jade bone ice muscle, China idiom, pinyin is y ǔ g ǔ b ě ng j:, which means to describe a woman's slim figure and fair and smooth skin. From Song Yang's "Liu Zao Qing": "jade bone Ice Muscle, who likes it better, especially suitable, an affair." Interpretation: Women's slim figure and fair and smooth skin are specially dressed for their own preferences, which is a kind of ambiguity.
3. Broken jade, a Chinese idiom, pinyin is yù shí jù suì, which means that jade and stones are still burning. From Enemy at the Gates, die a fine death. Although they want to save, they are ordinary. Interpretation: As soon as the soldiers put down, everything was still burning. Although they want to save it, there is nothing they can do.
4. Pearls are round and smooth, which is an idiom in China. Pinyin is zh Yuán yùrùn, which means that the song is euphemistic and beautiful, or the poem is fluent and lively. Interpretation from "Fang Liu contains jade embellishment, and the beads are round and jade embellishment": The water waves are moist as jade, and the splashing water is round and dazzling as beads.
5. Yuqionglou, an idiom in China, is pronounced yù yǔ qióng lóu, which means the palace where immortals live in mythology and describes a building covered with snow and ice. Said by: "Qionglou, come and go by Luan, people are in the cold country." Interpretation: The Jade Garden in the Qionglou of the Moon Palace, where fairy couples are free to go in and out, I yearn for purity and freedom in the Moon Palace.