laden with sorrow and maladies
Sentimental, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Du ō ch ó UDU ō B ì ng, meaning to describe the human body is weak and sick, emotional vulnerability, easy to be sad and depressed. In the old days, it was often used to describe the delicate posture of gifted scholars and beautiful ladies. It's from Zaixing.
Idiom explanation
[idiom]: sickly and melancholy [Pinyin]: Du ō B ì ngdu ō ch ó u [explanation]: it describes that the human body is weak and sickly, the emotion is fragile, and it is easy to be sad and depressed. In the old days, it was often used to describe the delicate posture of gifted scholars and beautiful ladies.
Idioms and allusions
[source]: Tang Weizhuang's "repaying happiness" says: "it's like a dream, like a bubble in the world, a melancholy body, knowing the wine Saint from chaos, and feeling the God of money from poverty." Let's give an example to make a sentence: a boy is sick and worried. How can he be regarded as a beautiful man. The fourth discount of the first book of the romance of the Western chamber by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: DBDC
Chinese PinYin : duō chóu duō bìng
laden with sorrow and maladies
vital organs of the human body. wǔ cáng liù fǔ
unable to distinguish between the clear and the muddy. jīng wèi bù fēn