gu ā n mi ? n t á ng Hu á ng
is a metaphor for being aboveboard, dignified and neat, and is often used to criticize people's words and statements.
he himself hid the charming amorous feelings that he turned around and ran away, and changed into a dignified face. -Qing Wu Yanren's "The Present Situation of the Strange Witnessed in Twenty Years"
① solemn and aboveboard. On Building Tianjing in Jinling by Zhu Xiangting, a Heavenly King of Taiping: "Compared with the crime of the demon cave, its grandeur is not even more profound?"
② It is often used in a derogatory sense, which describes the solemnity on the surface, but it is not. Li Liuru's "Sixty Years' Changes", Chapter 1, Section 4: "As long as you are members of parliament, you can get by on the surface, and you don't have to be picky!" Preface to Selected Poems of Ai Qing: "People don't like lies. No matter how pretentious and grandiose the lie is, it will not touch people's hearts. "
③ describe whether an action is public or legal. "The strange situation witnessed in twenty years" is back to the seventh and fifth times: "In this capital, visiting the" xianggong "is magnificent." Lu Xun's < Twenty-four Filial Piety Pictures >: "What I can read with dignity in front of the public are Wen Chang Di Jun Yin Wen Tu Shuo and Yu Li Chao Zhuan."