marry and settle down
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch é ngji ā L ì y è, which means to establish a family and a career. Generally speaking, it means that married men and women have jobs and can give their families a stable life. It comes from Meng Liang Lu, helping the poor and the old, written by Wu Zimu in Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wu Zimu of the Song Dynasty wrote in menglianglu, helping the poor and the old: "the rich families in Hangzhou are mostly people living in other counties Sifang department store is a collection of department stores. Since then, there have been many families and businesses. "
Idiom usage
In the first volume of Yu Shi Ming Yan by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty, he said to the Hun family five days ago: "as the saying goes," if you want to live in the mountains and empty air, my husband and wife will have to get married and start a business, or they will have to leave this line of food and clothing. " It turns out that the great ancestor of Lian Jinfeng lived in the south of the five ridges and fled overseas because of the chaos of the southern and Northern Dynasties. He was in the Junzi kingdom. (the 13th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: to settle down and start a business, to become a successful family [antonym]: to ruin one's fortune
Chinese PinYin : chéng jiā lì yiè
marry and settle down
be fashionable and adapted to the environment. yìng shí duì jǐng
advance gradually and entrench oneself at every step. bù bù wéi yíng
manoeuvre among political groups. bǎi hé zòng héng
obey others against one's will. jiàng xīn xiāng cóng