the vicissitudes of life
Lanyinxuguo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l á NY ī nx ù Gu ǒ, which means that a man and a woman are happy at the beginning of marriage and eventually divorced.
Lanyin comes from the book of changes.
The catkins come from a sentence in Xie Daokai's family banquet: "it's not like catkins because of the wind.".
Idiom explanation
Lanyin: a metaphor for a beautiful combination; Xuguo: a metaphor for a discrete ending.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of changes, Xici Part 1: "if two people are of one mind, their interest will be broken; if they are of one mind, their smell will be like orchid."
Ode to snow Liu Yiqing: collection of Taifu Hanxue's day, talking with his sons and daughters on the text. Russia and snow suddenly, the public happily said: "snow have what?" Elder brother hu er said, "if you sprinkle salt in the air, you can make a difference." Brother and daughter said: "if catkins are not due to the wind." The public laugh. That is to say, the elder brother has no daughter, and the wife of General Wang Ning.
Idiom usage
It refers to a man and a woman who are happy at the beginning of marriage and eventually divorced.
Examples
In the third year of Xuangong, Zuo Zhuan: "at the beginning of this period, Zheng Wengong had a concubine named Yanji, who dreamed of angels and Jilan."
"Yu Chu Xin Zhi · Xiao Qing Zhuan" says: "because of the fruit of orchid, who is deep in the present industry."
Gong Zizhen's "ugly slave order" words: "lanyinxuguo asked from the beginning, singing is also sad, pinching is also sad, dream to Lou Xin lights back."
Chinese PinYin : lán yīn xù guǒ
the vicissitudes of life
cause extreme worry and distress. xuán cháng guà dù