scent of passion
Poyutiaoyun, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ō y ǔ Li á oy ú n, which refers to teasing and testing each other's feelings; generally refers to flirting. It comes from the snow case of guessing poems in the South and west chamber.
The origin of Idioms
Li Rihua of Ming Dynasty wrote "the snow case of guessing poems in the story of the South and West Chamber": "you are trying to stir up the rain and clouds, and I am kind enough to send a letter to you. Miss, I'm not willing to search my own madness. I'm going to find someone's fault. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used as a tease between men and women. example make up the deaf and dumb, be frightened and frightened, stir up the rain and stir up the clouds for no reason, and become a lonely couple. The song of sweet scented osmanthus and Acacia
Chinese PinYin : bō yǔ liáo yún
scent of passion
tender heart and a chivalrous spirit. róu qíng xiá gǔ
take a plum tree for one 's wife and cranes for children -- a lofty scholar. méi qī hè zǐ
dredge for a needle in the sea. shuǐ dǐ lāo zhēn
unable to distinguish black from white. bù fēn zào bái
Stop the boiling and increase the salary. zhǐ fèi yì xīn