What does Chao Yi mean? The origin of Chao Yi

1. Chaoyi means exceeding the ordinary.

2. Chaoyi, Chinese vocabulary, pinyin chāo yì, means extraordinary; superb.

3. Source

(1) "Automatic Preface" by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty: "Hong Ti lacks extraordinary talents and occasionally likes to do nothing."

(2) "Book of Recommendations" by Han Yu of the Tang Dynasty: "When a craftsman passes by without looking at him, a Bole encounters him without looking at him, and then he realizes that he is not a pillar or a man of extraordinary ability."

(3) "Reply to Huang Lu Zhi Shu" by Su Shi of the Song Dynasty: "It means that it is transcendent and independent of all things; it controls the wind and the air to swim with the creator."

(4) Wang Shizhen of the Ming Dynasty Volume 3 of "Yiyuan Yanyan": "The unique words are naturally beautiful and elegant, and you will wake up when you read them."

(5) Chapter 16 of "A Dream of Red Mansions": "Baoyu looks carefully at that When Daiyu appeared, she became more and more elegant."