blemishes
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is f ē ngli ú Zu ì guॸ, which refers to the fault caused by elegance; later, it also refers to the crime caused by the relationship between men and women. It comes from the biography of Langji in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty.
Notes on Idioms
Romantic: the so-called elegant style of the feudal literati.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Langji in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty: "it is also a crime to write books in the official position."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to the amorous feelings of men and women. example Gong Jin taught me to finish it in ten days, but the craftsman didn't know what to do with it. He told me that he wanted to kill me. (the 46th chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty) Song Dynasty's Huang Tingjian's poem "man Ting Fang" said: "some of the crimes are related to the moon." The second part of Shang Zhongxian's Shan Bian duo Shu in Yuan Dynasty: "you call Yuchi Gong to look for his immorality, but you say he has two hearts and put him in prison." "The story of the private red lotus of the five commandments Zen master in the story of Pingshan Hall of the Qing Dynasty:" suddenly one day, the bachelor was found guilty by the Prime Minister Wang Jinggong and demoted to Huangzhou. " Chapter 120 of the outlaws of the Marsh: "since the court has doubts, it is bound to seek the guilty of immortality."
Chinese PinYin : fēng liú zuì guò
blemishes
Beautiful melody with clear words. qīng cí lì qǔ
sport with the wind and play with the moon -- seek pleasure. cháo fēng nòng yuè
with one 's face flushed and one 's ears hot. miàn hóng ěr rè
Seven sons and eight sons in law. qī zǐ bā xù