be spoiled
Pampered, Chinese idiom,
The Pinyin is Ji ā OSH ē nggu à NY ǎ ng,
Definition: it refers to being spoiled and pampered since childhood.
Citation explanation
"It seems that these days, I don't agree with you in the face of Bodhisattvas. Who wants to be spoiled? You are usually not decent." Chapter 29 of a dream of Red Mansions written by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "the children of small families are all spoiled. Where have you seen this trend school?" Chapter 74 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: I just want to say how spoiled and precious your mother, sister Lin, was when she was not in the cabinet! Chapter 77 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty: "Baoyu said with a sneer," I thought he had been pampered since he was a child. How could he have been wronged for a day? " Chapter 29 of Li Baojia's the appearance of officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: Although the old generation has withered, a group of old children, inheriting their grandfather's shadow, can't write, can't draw a bow. They are spoiled and have nothing to do. Fortunately, the imperial court's donation rules have been greatly opened, and the previous generation has won the Yuan Bao. They only need to carry it out and exchange it. They can't donate except the governor, Fu, fan and Gao, so they all donate to Daotai. "The popular saying is sparse. Years. Spoiled" quoted from "sick jade fate drama": I think Miss was spoiled at the time of Qiu Fu, just like a baby.
example sentence
She has been spoiled since childhood and can't do anything.
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning.
Chinese PinYin : jiāo shēng guàn yǎng
be spoiled
strengthening the body resistance to eliminate pathogenic factors. fú zhèng qū xié
draw from one to make good the deficits of another. yì bǐ zhù cǐ
reference to a fight among brothers. zhǔ dòu rán qí
prolonged illness makes the patient be a doctor. jiǔ bìng chéng yī