in love
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǎ Q í NGM à Q à, which means that beating is love and scolding is fun; it is still said that beating is relative and scolding is love; it is still called flirting and scolding. It comes from the Dragon paste · Dijie.
The origin of Idioms
"The emperor's son-in-law, he's willing to scold you. It's a way of saying it," said Yang Fu in his Longgao Ji Dijie of Ming Dynasty
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it refers to the flirtation between men and women. Chapter 11 of the biography of flowers on the sea: "but there are a group of noodle waiters who come here in droves. They only say that they are tea moving guests. They are surrounded by Castanopsis wreaths, making fun of each other, pretending to be angry and laughing, and asking Xiao Yun to make friends."
Chinese PinYin : dǎ qíng mà qù
in love
time passed by and life changed. shí yí shì yì
ready to die the cruelest death for principles. gān dǎn tú dì
You can't be square without rules. bù yǐ guī jǔ,bù néng chéng fāng yuán
initiate the dispatch of contingents of armed men and the mobilization of the masses. xīng shī dòng zhòng