seek pleasures
It is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is m ǎ IXI à ozhu ī n, which means whoring and having fun. From the water margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty.
idiom
seek pleasures
Pinyin
mǎixiàozhuīhuān
Citation explanation
Whoring, whoring and having fun. The ninety fourth chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: "the grain and rates stored in the storehouse are the cream of the people. You only pay attention to invade and enrich yourself, and you corrupt many major national affairs." The first chapter of "Jin Ping Mei CI Hua" written by Lanling Xiaosheng in Ming Dynasty: "it's like three wives and four concubines. It's another matter to buy a smile and pursue a happy life." Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty's Xingshi Hengyan and Youlang's monopolization of Huakui: Although many people get along with each other in the future, they are all luxurious people and drunkards, but they know that they are willing to buy and laugh, and they have the heart of pity for jade. It seems that you are the only one who is sincere. Tao Zongyi of Ming Dynasty wrote in the record of stopping farming: Lian Zhixiu: "Wuling people buy a laugh and chase after a good time, but they turn around and ignore it; the three islanders talk about metaphysics and Taoism, and meet each other." First, you can ask for a debt, second, you can buy a laugh, third, you can look for a convenience, find a future, and benefit for life The sixth chapter of Zeng Pu's the flowers of the evil sea in Qing Dynasty: wine is the fate, color is the fate, 12:00 to buy a laugh and chase a joy, and dream forever and ever; sincerely watch the opera, sincerely listen to the opera, four or nine days appear to win the brocade, double phoenix and double Lin together!
Discrimination of words
Synonym: to buy a smile to seek happiness, to buy a smile to welcome happiness, to seek happiness to make fun of
Chinese PinYin : mǎi xiào zhuī huān
seek pleasures
If one does not press the crowd, one hundred will not follow one. yī bù yā zhòng,bǎi bù suí yī
willing to die a martyr to one 's just cause. bù wàng gōu hè
shining spears and armoured horses - a symbol of war in ancient china. tiě mǎ jīn gē