Wine and flowers
Jiudihuatian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ǔ D ì Hu ā Ti ā n, which means to describe the life of eating, drinking, whoring, gambling, and corruption. It's from the flowers of the evil sea.
The origin of Idioms
The first chapter of Zeng Pu's "flowers of the evil sea" in Qing Dynasty: "an long Di drinks tea, Tian Le Wo listens to singing, Ma Long Che Shui, wine and flowers, what a peaceful scene!"
Idiom usage
Although Kang Zhongcheng was over fifty years old, looking at these white and green enchantresses living such a day and moon, it was natural that he was sentimental. Who could send him here? Chapter 118 of Zhang Chunfan's Nine Tailed turtle in Qing Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : jiǔ dì huā tiān
Wine and flowers
feel shame before heaven and fellow human beings. kuì tiān zuò rén
take hold of bushes and trees to pull oneself up. pān téng fù gě
bemoan the state of the universe and pity the fate of mankind. bēi tiān mǐn rén
The combination of pearls and jade. zhū bì lián huī
The government is light and the situation is weak. guān qīng shì wēi