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An interesting idiom to describe people.

Interesting, witty, wonderful, interesting, interesting.

First of all, it is full of fun.

Explanation: Make trouble: show it endlessly. Full of wonderful interests (especially language, articles or works of art).

From: Qin Mu's Picking up Shells from the Ocean of Art, the Power of Art and the Interest of Writing: "Many ordinary things are interesting in the works of outstanding authors, and an important means they use is to use metaphor."

Second, wit.

Description: The description is very humorous.

From: The Second Training of Gao Chuan, a Draft of the History of Qing Dynasty (Editor-in-Chief): "You are fond of painting. It's really interesting to judge whether a stone becomes a sheep, or a sheep, or a half-finished one without leaving it as a stone."

I am particularly good at pointing out. I once shot sheep in Huang Chuping, and some of them have turned into sheep and stood up. Some people will succeed, but they cannot afford it. Half stone, very humorous, very humorous.

Third, wonderful [miaào bùk yán]

Explanation: Wonderful: Wonderful. The description is too good to be expressed in words and language.

Said by: Fu Jiang, Pu Xue of the State of Jin: "Beauty lies in endless words, and things cannot be limited by words."

Great, it can't be expressed in words and words, and everything can't be written down with a pen.

Fourth, interesting.

Interpretation: People's speeches, poems, etc. Full of wonderful interests.

From: Li Dazhao's Difficult National Games and Hero's Nationals: "The more you walk into the rugged realm, the more interesting you feel in this fantastic realm."

The more you go to the rugged realm, the more strange and interesting it is. The more you can be in this fantastic and magnificent realm, the more you feel the beauty of adventure.

Verbs (short for verb) set each other off as fun [Xi]

Interpretation: reflection: contrast, foil. It's interesting to set each other off.

From: Qin Mu's "Painting an Egg": "There are some things in the history of Chinese and foreign art, which can be said to often set each other off."