sing and dance to extol the good times
Singing and dancing is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is g ē w ǔ sh ē NGP í ng, which means singing and dancing to celebrate peace and prosperity. It comes from Liu Yazi's chronicle of Nala Wanshou Festival on October 10.
Idiom explanation
Shengping: Taiping. Singing and dancing at the same time, celebrating peace and prosperity.
Idiom usage
Example: Liu Yazi's poem "a chronicle of the Wanshou festival of Nala on October 10:" Hu Ji also learned to wish Huafeng, singing, dancing and peace everywhere. " The sixth chapter of Zeng Pu's the flowers of the evil sea in Qing Dynasty: "but a group of high-ranking officials and dignitaries, who were drunk and dreamt of death, were all in high spirits, singing and dancing." the new year is coming. Everyone is singing, dancing and celebrating.
The origin of Idioms
"The thirty first year of Xianggong in Zuozhuan:" at the beginning of King Wen, the world sang and danced. " Zhang Heng's "Tokyo Fu" in the Han Dynasty: "humble oneself, rule to the virtue of peace."
Chinese PinYin : gē wǔ shēng píng
sing and dance to extol the good times
crossing the sea under camouflage. mán tiān guò hǎi
make amends for previous faults by some good services. jiāng gōng bǔ guò
Divide the house and cut down the share. fēn fáng jiǎn kǒu
There is a gap between the two. tóu jiān dǐ xì