To nourish one's stomach
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is g ǔ f ù h á Nb ǔ, which means having food in your mouth and patting your stomach. It describes the carefree life in the Taiping era. From Zhuangzi horseshoe.
Analysis of Idioms
The meaning of the word is harmonious
The origin of Idioms
Zhuangzi horseshoe: "when Huxley was a husband, he didn't know what he was doing and what he was doing. He was full of nourishment and cheerfulness, and he swam with his belly. The people could do this."
Idiom usage
Life is peaceful. Examples Yao and Shun celebrate three more days and sing everywhere. The first chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty
Idioms and allusions
At the end of the Qin Dynasty, peasants all over the country revolted one after another. However, Zhao Gao, the prime minister, accused the messengers of fabricating rumors and putting them in prison. Hu Hai, the second emperor of the Qin Dynasty, asked about the peasant uprising, but Shu Suntong said that it was just a burglar. There was no need to panic. The second promoted him to a higher rank. However, the Qin Dynasty was soon overthrown by the peasant uprising.
Chinese PinYin : gǔ fù hán bǔ
To nourish one's stomach
be threatened by growing crises. wēi jī sì fú
rub smooth one 's whole body from the crown to the heel. mó dǐng fàng zhǒng
be astute in devising great plans. hóng cái dà lüè