dead drunk
It's a Chinese idiom, Ji ǔ h ā n ě RR è in pinyin, which means when you are having a good time. From the book of Bao sun Hui Zong.
Idiom explanation
Drunk: drink very well.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Yun of Han Dynasty wrote in the book of reporting to sun Huizong: "after drinking, one's ears are hot, he looks up at the sky and calls Wu Wu."
Analysis of Idioms
Drinking too much and ear heat after drinking
Idiom usage
It can be used as predicate and attributive. Let's hold the cup. In Zhang Chao's biography of Wang Cuiqiao and Cao Pi's biography of Wu in the Three Kingdoms period, it is said that "every time the cup is popular, the silk and bamboo are played together, the wine is hot and the ears are hot, and the poems are written on the back of one's head. At this time, one suddenly doesn't know that music is good." Zhang Chao's biography of Wang Cuiqiao in the new Annals of Yu Chu in Qing Dynasty. Xu Xuan of Tang Dynasty's three excellent works of "Ya Yuan she Ren Bu Dai" are not easy to ignore A smile from the capital: many talented officials can play drums and sing and dance among the golden boats. Drunk and hot, dazzled and dazzled. Liu Kezhuang of Song Dynasty: an article on wine drinking and hot ears. Knock down the next wall. Push down the cot. Look on, clap your hands and laugh. It doesn't matter if it's sparse. Why not be crazy. Wang Mai of Song Dynasty "he bridegroom (send Zhao Boyong to guard Wenling)": drunk, hot and long. Then Pian Pian, stop classes, a branch of Fujian Qiao. It's no use laughing, but fishing for the moon. Chapter 8 of the scholars written by Wu Jingzi of the Qing Dynasty: this kind of discussion should be made when people are drunk and hot. Lou Tongzheng also couldn't hear it. He was afraid of causing trouble, so he advised him to go back to Zhejiang.
Chinese PinYin : jiǔ hān ěr rè
dead drunk
always keep each other's company. shuāng sù shuāng fēi