"Lower Riba" is used to refer to very vulgar and ordinary things, while "Yangchun Baixue" is used to refer to extremely elegant and very clever things.
Xialibaren is a Chinese word, pronounced xià lǐ bā rén. It originally referred to a popular song among the Chu people during the Warring States Period, and is now used as a metaphor in popular literature and art. The opposite of "Bright Spring and White Snow" is a metaphor for profound but unpopular literature and art.
Yangchun Baixue[1]
Idiom Yangchun Baixue
Pinyin yáng chūn bái xuě
English highbrow art and literature
Source: "Asking the King of Chu" by Yu of the Chu and Song Dynasties during the Warring States Period: "When a guest sings in Yingzhong, he begins by saying: "Xia Li", "Ba Ren", and there are thousands of people in the country who are harmonious. ... They are "Yangchun" and "White Snow", there are only a few dozen people in the country who belong to harmony. "
The interpretation originally refers to a highly artistic and difficult song of the Chu State during the Warring States Period. It is a metaphor for profound and unpopular literature and art.
The structures "Yangchun" and "White Snow" form a parallel structure.
Usage is often used as subject, object, and attributive.
Create a sentence: This article is elegant in style, full of spring and snow
After hearing this, the elder exclaimed in admiration: "It's really~, so majestic that it soars into the sky." Fourteen times.
Synonyms: high-end, low-key, low-key
Antonyms: elegance and vulgarity, low-level people