Gold shackles and jade chains
Jinjieyusuo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NJI ā y ù Su ǒ, which means that children are not only the treasure of their parents, but also the burden and burden. It comes from xiaozhangtu by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Children are golden shackles, happy enemies, I gave them up.
The origin of Idioms
The second fold of Yuan Dynasty's Wu Ming Shi's Xiao Zhang Tu: "there are only a few disasters on the coming day, and the children are golden shackles."
Idiom explanation
Flail: the instrument of torture around the neck; chain: the instrument of torture connected by iron rings. Children are not only the treasure of parents, but also the burden and burden.
Chinese PinYin : jīn jiā yù suǒ
Gold shackles and jade chains
burn famous string instrument for fuel and cook crane for meat -- offense against culture. shāo qín zhǔ hè
Beaver to rat, ice to rope. yǐ lí zhì shǔ、yǐ bīng zhì shéng
a cool breeze felt by all the guests. mǎn zuò fēng shēng
The west mountain is declining. xī shān rì báo