prostitutes no longer young
It is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is B à Ili à C á nhu à, which means a woman who has been insulted and a woman who has been in trouble. It comes from the romance of the Western chamber.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: withering flowers antonym: Golden branches and jade leaves
Idiom usage
Idiom structure: combined form
The origin of Idioms
The third book of the romance of the West Chamber written by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty: he is a girl's family. You should be gentle Don't guess what to do.
Idioms and allusions
Don't end up like a broken flower or a broken willow. I'll give birth to my eldest son and daughter with you. Hope leads to the same bed and death leads to the same acupoint. Sing Tao, topic, column, mind, when Xun's ambition, but also the front edge of previous life, this life, this industry. ——Pei Shaojun, the son of Shangshu, was ordered to buy flower seedlings in Luoyang. He ran into Li Qianjin, the daughter of the general manager. They fell in love at first sight and set up a private contract for life. Shaojun takes Li Qianjin back to Chang'an home and hides her in the back garden. They lived together for seven years and had a son and a daughter. However, Pei Shaojun's father did not allow him to do so. After many frustrations, the couple finally got together. The word "remnant flowers and fallen willows" comes from the third fold of "wall horse", Li Qianjin's libretto.
Chinese PinYin : bài liǔ cán huā
prostitutes no longer young
Protect the situation and the people. bǎo jìng xī mín
as clean as ice and as pure as jade. bīng qīng yù jié
A clear mind and a vague mind. chéng sī miǎo lǜ