amorist
Lecherous, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h à OS è zh à t ú, which means a person who likes and plays with women. From he Dian.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 8 of he Dian written by Zhang Nanzhuang in Qing Dynasty: "ignorance is a lecherous person in essence. How can you live! If you can't do anything at home, you'll look for flowers and willows outside. "
Idiom usage
In the Analects of Confucius, Zi Han: "I have not seen good virtue; I have not seen good sex." Chapter 32 of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: Wang Aihu is a lecherous. He has seen the newspaper and thinks that this sedan chair must be a woman. He will light up thirty or fifty minions and go down the mountain. Chapter 8 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in the Ming Dynasty: I think they are both lustful people. Now they want to use a series of stratagems to marry you Xu to Lu Bu first, and then offer it to Dong Zhuo. When you take advantage of it, you spy on his father and son, and order Bu to kill Zhuo. Chapter 8 of he Dian written by Zhang Nanzhuang in Qing Dynasty: "ignorance is a lecherous person in essence. How can you live! If you can't do anything at home, you'll look for flowers and willows outside. " Qing Dynasty · Lingnan badminton lady's "Eastern European heroine" Chapter 2: he must be a lecheron, but he followed me like a butterfly loves flowers. It's ridiculous that there are such people in the world.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: a drunken man; antonym: not a woman
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning
Chinese PinYin : hào sè zhī tú
amorist
all sorts of feelings well up in one 's mind. gǎn kǎi wàn duān
reduce an official to the ranks of the people. xuē zhí wéi mín