good
Across
- 3. At the bonfire party, her profile glowed in the firelight, with the edges of her eyelashes like dancing gold foil.
- 4. Touching the bark of an old tree, you can feel its rough texture, as if carved with deep and shallow gullies by time.
- 7. If you don't apply hand cream in winter, the back of your hands can easily become chapped.
- 10. After hearing the praise, the tips of her ears quietly reddened, like a layer of twilight glow dyed upon them.
- 12. The neck brushed by catkins suddenly feels itchy, as if fine fluff is burrowing under the skin, making one unable to resist reaching out to scratch.
- 13. After applying poor-quality foundation, the forehead starts to flake, like thin shells cracking on a dried-up riverbed, falling off rustling.
Down
- 1. When touching an exhausted bar of soap while washing hands, its surface is as smooth as polished jade.
- 2. After staying up late to binge-watch dramas, the skin subtly turns oily—pressing a blotting paper on it leaves a transparent oil mark, like a frying pan after cooking an egg.
- 5. The steak pan, not cleaned in time, has a greasy bottom like a layer of melted butter, and wiping it with a tissue leaves a shiny oil stain.
- 6. Fingers soaked in the bathtub for a long time have wrinkled fingertips, like rice paper puckered by water, uneven and bumpy.
- 7. After running without wiping off the sweat in time, the skin on the neck becomes clammy.
- 8. After several days of autumn wind, the lips quietly start peeling—touching them with a cotton swab makes flakes fall off, like dry cracks peeling from old tree bark.
- 9. After running the air conditioner for a long time, the cheeks become dry, tight like a water-deficient sponge.
- 11. When pushing open the window at dawn, dewy water droplets roll on the petals, like a scattering of fine crystals.