exchange solemn vows and pledges
Haishishanmeng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǎ sh ì sh ā nm é ng, which means that men and women make vows when they love each other. Love should be as eternal as mountains and seas. From nanxiangzi, a gift to prostitutes.
The origin of Idioms
Xin Qiji, Song Dynasty, wrote in nanxiangzi, a gift to prostitutes: "don't cry a little, but vow to be loyal."
Idiom usage
How can we break up now? Han Yuefu folk song Shangxie: Shangxie! I want to know you and live a long life. Mountain without mausoleum, river exhausted, thunder and earthquake in winter, rain and snow in summer, heaven and earth together, but dare with you! God! I long to know and cherish with you, and my heart will never fade. Unless the towering mountains disappear, unless the surging rivers dry up. Unless the cold winter thunder roll, unless the hot summer snow, unless the heaven and earth intersect and connect, until such things happen, I dare to abandon your love! There is no mausoleum in the mountain, it is a mountain alliance. When the river is exhausted, it is the oath of the sea. Hu Haoran, Song Dynasty, wrote the Ci poem "the world is a collection of Ci poems, vowing to live forever." "Don't cry a little," says Xin Qiji of the Song Dynasty in nanxiangzi, a gift to a prostitute Gibran's song of the waves: "in the morning, I made a vow in my lover's ear, so he held me tightly in his arms."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: forever, unswervingly, unswervingly, forever Antonyms: morning, night, night, water, change when you see different things
Chinese PinYin : hǎi shì shān méng
exchange solemn vows and pledges
take away by force or trickery. qiǎo qǔ háo duó
Drinking water and eating vegetables. yǐn shuǐ shí shū
floating melons and plums submerged in water. fú guā chén lǐ