Fat, sweet, light and warm
Fat, sweet, light and warm, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f é Ig ā NQ ī ngnu ǎ n, meaning to live well. It comes from Mencius, the first king of Liang Hui.
The origin of Idioms
In the Warring States period, Mencius · Liang Hui Wang Shang written by Mencius · Mencius Ke: "is it not enough to be fat and sweet? Light and warm is not enough for body and body? "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in life
Examples
Wang Fuzhi's "the complete collection of reading four books · Mencius · King Liang Hui Chapter 14" in the Qing Dynasty: for example, King Liang Xiang, who was determined that there could be no one in the world, had only lived a life of warmth and contentment.
Liu Dakui of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his book the biography of the virtuous and chivalrous men of the Tang Dynasty: "the ancient gentleman was determined to be an official rather than a housewife."
Chinese PinYin : féi gān qīng nuǎn
Fat, sweet, light and warm
major issues issues of right and wrong. dà shì dà fēi
have won fame both at home and abroad. chí míng zhōng wài
one 's sincerity moves even the sucking pigs and fish. xìn jí tún yú
stamp one 's feet and beat one 's breast. dùn jiǎo chuí xiōng
with the force of thunder and lightning. hōng léi chè diàn