Meat and wine
As a Chinese idiom, jiangjiuhuorou, Pinyin is Ji āǔø Hu ò R ò u, which means to treat wine and meat as water slurry and bean leaf; it describes the luxury of food. It's from the book of Han Dynasty. Bao's propaganda.
The origin of Idioms
Bao propagandize in the book of Han Dynasty: "how can I raise my relatives and lucky minister Dong Xian in private, and give them tens of thousands of rewards, so that the slaves can get rich from their guests."
Idiom usage
Combined; as object and attribute; with derogatory meaning. The 95th chapter of Li Lvyuan's Qiludeng in Qing Dynasty: "the lantern is full of color, and there are people who are dazed."
Chinese PinYin : jiāng jiǔ huò ròu
Meat and wine
Orange turns into trifoliate orange. jú huà wéi zhǐ
the beam breaking and the rafter falling -- the country being in a stage of ruin. dòng xiǔ cuī bēng