From Xiao Hong's "Life and Death Field" VI: "The breeze began to ripple green, and summer came to the world, and trees were planted on the leaves."
Ripple is a Chinese character, and the pinyin is dàng yàng, which means wandering; Ups and downs; Water level fluctuation; Describe ups and downs.
For example, it is still cold all around in winter, but the long-lost spring in my hometown is rippling in this sky. -Lu Xun's kite
Extended data:
1, full of vitality, Chinese idiom, pinyin shēng jī bó bó, to describe the appearance of vitality.
Entrepreneurship from Zhang Tianmin: The oilfield is full of vitality, busyness and prosperity.
2. Energetic is an idiom in China, pronounced shēng jīng rán, which means energetic and describes vitality.
From Yang Shuo's "Writing Huai Er on the Jinggang Mountain in Xijiang": "Today, that oak tree still stands unscathed on the top of the mountain, and its branches look a little old, but full of vitality."
3, a glimmer of life: there is still a little hope of survival.
From Luo Song Dajing's Record of He Lin Yu: "If you use Wen Taizhen's words to clear the way for villains and Fan Zhi's words to worry about future troubles for gentlemen, you will lose."
If we try to lend a person who is too real to give the villain a chance to live, then it would be wrong to take Mr. Fan for the sake of the gentleman's fear of future disasters.