1, fragile, China idiom, pinyin is ruò bù jīn fēng f ē ng f ē ng, which means to describe a person's delicate body, even the wind can't stand it. From the Tang Dynasty poet Du Fu's "Jiang Yuhuai Zheng Dian Poetry": the waves hit the shore, and the clouds are messy.
2, skinny, China idiom, Pinyin is shòu gǔ lín xún, which means to describe people or animals thin and explicit. From Chapter 18 of "Spring and Autumn in a Small Town": Xiuwei saw a naked and bony child labourer, carrying a dustpan of mud, struggling to walk on the suspended springboard.
3. Chen Yu Lu ò Yan is an idiom, which originated from The Theory of Everything, Zhuangzi. When a fish falls into a wild goose, it means that when a fish sees it, it sinks into the bottom of the water, and when a wild goose sees it, it falls on a sandbar, describing the beauty of a woman. The structure of this idiom is combined; Generally, it is used as predicate, object and attribute in sentences.
4. Graceful (China idiom) generally means graceful. Tingting and Yuli is an idiom in China, also called graceful and colorful, pronounced Tí ng Tí ng Y ü Li, which describes women's slender figure and tall flowers and trees.
5, born beautiful, China idiom, Pinyin is Tiā n sh ē ng l ē zhi zhi, which means that you were born beautiful. From Don Bai Juyi's Song of Eternal Sorrow: But the grace of heaven cannot be hidden, and finally one day it was elected to the royal family.
Poems describing women's thinness and beauty;
1, sweet-scented osmanthus flowing tiles, gone forever, slim waist, describing women as thin and beautiful.
2, the bun is loose, the lead is light, the smoke cover is light, and the flying is uncertain.
3, Mo Tao does not forget me, the curtain rolls west wind, people are thinner than yellow flowers, describing women's beauty.