Chinese herbal medicine
Jiangjiuhuorou, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji āǔø Hu ò R ò u, which means to treat the wine and meat as water pulp and bean leaf; it describes the luxury of food; it is the same as "jiangjiuhuorou". From the collection of Arts and culture.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Zhou Lang in the book of Song Dynasty, it is said that "those who are painted with gold and covered with embroidery, and those who are thick with wine and flesh, can not be called Ji."
Idiom usage
It is used as object and attribute to describe extravagance in food and drink. The book of Han Dynasty is quoted in volume 72 of Yiwen leiju: "how can a man raise his relatives in private, and how can he be rewarded with his lucky minister Dong Xian
Chinese PinYin : jiāng jiǔ huò ròu
Chinese herbal medicine
a daily increase in population. shēng chǐ rì fán
be derelict in duty and run irrelevant business. bù wù zhèng yè
find it difficult to tear apart. nán shě nán fēn