a playboy
Childe, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ō ngz ǐ g ē R, which means the children of rich people who only talk about eating, drinking and playing, not doing their job. come from
The origin of Idioms
In the fifth chapter of biography of children heroes written by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty, "seeing the actions of young master an, I knew early that he was a young man who had no way to live in the world, had a hard life, and had a good relationship with others."
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; male. What can a boy like you do. Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 of a dream of Red Mansions: "Hong Fu, who is holding the master on the top, and Lao Tzu, who is holding your mother on the bottom, is also like a childe. She reads and writes like a girl, wife, and milk holding a Phoenix. She has grown so big." Chapter 56 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "it's common for childe to spend recklessly." Lu Xun's "lacy Literature: snow flies in the air" said: "however, if he had not been a boy since he was a child, and had been somewhat related to the" lower class ", then when you think about it, you will remember that they have many good words better than classical Chinese or vernacular Chinese." Ba Jin's "home" 38: "it's said that the habits in Shanghai schools are worse. When you study there, you can either be a childe or a troublemaker."
Chinese PinYin : gōng zǐ gē ér
a playboy
make a poor imitation of sth.. huà hǔ lèi quǎn
do one 's utmost to hold one 's own opinion against that of the majority. lì pái zhòng yì