hardships of travel or a hard life in the open country
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ā NF ē ngy ǐ NL ù, which means to describe the hardship of travel or outdoor life. From Yi Lu Wen.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Shouren of the Ming Dynasty wrote in his "funeral travel literature" that "no one is hungry when eating wind and drinking dew."
Analysis of Idioms
Food and drink
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate, object, attribute, etc. However, field investigation and geological work are also arduous. Xu Chi's geological light
Chinese PinYin : cān fēng yǐn lù
hardships of travel or a hard life in the open country
Thousands of streets are changing every day. rì zhuǎn qiān jiē
continue to study even in old age. bái shǒu qióng jīng
obtain gold by washing it from sand and gravel. shā lǐ táo jīn
study by the light of reflected snow or glow-worms. xuě chuāng yíng jǐ
infringe upon the prevalent social conventions. wéi shì jué sú