The bell tolls at the end of the day
Ding food bell, D ǐ ngsh í m í ngzh ō ng, an idiom, means Ding: ancient cooking utensils; Zhong: ancient musical instruments. Strike the bell and eat. It describes the luxurious life of the nobility. From: Song Dynasty Wang Yucheng's Ode to the sage who does not eat at home: "the time will come when the bell tolls for food, and the time will come when Yu and Ning will be stingy."
Idiom explanation
[explanation]: Ding: Ancient cookers; Zhong: ancient musical instruments. Strike the bell and eat. It describes the luxurious life of the nobility.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Wang Yucheng of the Song Dynasty wrote in his ode to the sage who does not eat at home: "the time will come when the bell tolls for food, and the time will come when Yu and Ning will be stingy." [give an example to make a sentence]: the Marquis of yonghou was granted the Ding food bell, which was highly praised by the imperial court. The story of flying pill: no birth of burying wheel by Zhang Jing in Ming Dynasty
Discrimination of words
Phonetic code: DSMZ synonym: Zhong mingdingshi usage: used as object and attribute to describe the luxurious life of the aristocracy
Chinese PinYin : dǐng shí míng zhōng
The bell tolls at the end of the day
the four corners of the land. jiāng nán hǎi běi
many guests of exalted rank were present. gāo péng mǎn zuò
The road is high and the devil is heavy. dào gāo mó zhòng
To drink and make medicine empty. zhuó yíng jì xū
send armed forces to suppress. míng gǔ ér gōng