dependents of royal families
Yuye Jinzhi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ù y è J ī nzh ī, which means that it originally describes beautiful flowers and trees. The latter refers to the descendants of the royal family. Now it also refers to a person of noble or delicate birth. It's from Jin cuibao's ancient and Modern Annotation: Yufu.
The origin of Idioms
Cui Bao of Jin Dynasty wrote in the ancient and Modern Annotation of Yufu: "fighting with Chiyou in the field of Zhuolu, there are often five colors of clouds, golden branches and jade leaves, which stop on the emperor."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonyms]: Imperial relatives, Yuye Jinzhi, Yuye Jinke [antonyms]: Pengmen Jingbu, wuwufu [Xiehouyu]: the daughter of the imperial court [lantern riddle]: Jin Yushu
Idiom usage
The daughter of a rich family, the sister-in-law of a rich family, is a beautiful woman. She will get sick if she blows a wind. Sha Ting's an autumn evening
Chinese PinYin : yù yè jīn zhī
dependents of royal families
be apt at devising a good plan for oneself. shàn zì wéi móu
All the people play in the sea. qún hóng xì hǎi
rush about telling the news around spreading. bēn zǒu xiāng gào
there were many roads and much business. liù jiē sān mò