neither drink nor eat
No tea, no rice, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù ch á B ù f à n, meaning do not want to eat. It's a matter of mind. From "save the wind".
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Guan Hanqing's "save the wind and dust" the third fold: "I'm not eating, I'm just thinking about you.
Idiom usage
In a moment, the clouds and rain darken Wushan mountain. It's so dull that I can't tell you where I'm worried. (Hu Wenhuan, Ming Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
Don't eat, don't drink, don't think about food and tea
Chinese PinYin : bù chá bù fàn
neither drink nor eat
sudden spurt of vitality prior to collapse. huí guāng fǎn zhào