彬彬有礼
Explanation: Bin-bin: original intent was to look both text quality, the latter described as elegant. Elegant way to describe polite. Usage: Partial official; as predicate, adverbial, complement; describe the people polite Source: Qing Li Ruzhen "Flowers in the Mirror" 83 back: "conjured his two sons, brother, after the first brother, polite." Examples: Calling out his two sons, brother, after the first brother, ~. (Qing Li Ruzhen "Flowers in the Mirror," the eighty-third back)- Thesaurus: Gentle, Pale-faced scholar, gentle and frail-looking egghead, Be natural,graceful and poised Daya, a modest,self-disciplined gentleman, aspect coolly, genteel manners and behaviour
- Antonym Group: assumption haughtiness, assumption leave out excessive courtesy, assumption audacity, razzmatazz literary excellence, to tease one's lover by showing false displeasure prostitution, tease one's lover by showing false displeasure, put one's head into a hornets'nest, (said of a woman) to act like a habitual flirt, provoke discord, Windiness Embrace fire, Saotou (said of women) to assume a charming pose, Saoshou (said of women) to assume a charming pose
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