Miserable years
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ǎ NL ǜ Ni á nhu á, which means the prime of youth. It comes from Ji Mao's work in Beijing in spring and summer.
Analysis of Idioms
Hua xinnianhua
Idiom usage
I'd like to have a good time with you, but I don't want to see you. The first volume of Shi Zhou Chun Yu written by Er Shisheng in Qing Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
The seventh poem of Gong Zizhen's "Ji Mao wrote in the capital from spring to summer" in Qing Dynasty: "ten years advocate thinking about the body, and the memory of miserable green years is true."
Chinese PinYin : cǎn lǜ nián huá
Miserable years
be a restless fellow like a drifting water plant. píng zōng làng jì
The bell tolls at the end of the day. dǐng shí míng zhōng
East, West, North and South. dōng xi nán běi rén
visit the poor and the suffering. fǎng pín wèn kǔ