A good sale
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is l ǜ C ǎ NH ó ngxi ā o, which means women's worries. It comes from Tang Xianzu's the story of the purple hairpin, a comment on the drunken knight.
The origin of Idioms
Tang Xianzu of the Ming Dynasty wrote "the story of the purple hairpin, the idle comment on the drunken chivalrous man" that "his heart is haggard, and it's hard to hear that he's selling well."
Analysis of Idioms
Green and red
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : lǜ cǎn hóng xiāo
A good sale
a person of great ability and tremendous potential. dòng liáng zhī cái
make endless exorbitant demands. zhū qiú wú yàn
a scene of bustling activity. lóng téng hǔ yuè
mow the grass and pull out the roots. jiǎn cǎo chú gēn