Hebeiyangzhou
Hebeiyangzhou, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h è B è iy á ngzh ō u, which means desire for gain. It comes from the novel by Liang Yin Yun of the Southern Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It refers to the desire for profit.
The origin of Idioms
The sixth volume of the novel by Liang Yin Yun in the Southern Dynasty: "there are guests who follow each other. They have different aspirations: they were originally the governor of Yangzhou, or they had a lot of money, or they were riding on cranes. One of them said:" if you have a hundred thousand Yuan waist, you can ride on cranes to Yangzhou. " I want to combine the three. "
Analysis of Idioms
Riding crane to Yangzhou
Idiom usage
When people are greedy, what they want, when they laugh. In Yuan Dynasty, Wang Dexin's "jixianbin: retire from seclusion" Divertimento you can eat without meat, you can't live without bamboo; no meat makes you thin, no bamboo makes you vulgar. A man is thin but fat, but a layman can't be cured. if you still chew on this, is there Yangzhou crane in the world? Song Sushi's Yu Qian monk Lu Yun Xuan
Chinese PinYin : hè bèi yáng zhōu
Hebeiyangzhou
a person who returns to a place he once abandoned. qián dù liú láng
peerless or matchless bravery or valour. yǒng guàn sān jūn
courtesy requires a return of visits received. lǐ shàng wǎng lái