be dead drunk
Drunk, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ǐ NGD ǐ NGD à Zu ì, interpretation is to describe drunk very much. It comes from the annotation of water classics mianshui by Li Daoyuan of the Northern Wei Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Drunk, drunk, drunk
The origin of Idioms
Li Daoyuan of the Northern Wei Dynasty wrote in the annotation of the water classic mianshui: "when the sun goes down, I return home, and I don't know what I'm drunk."
Idiom usage
Li Kui was not able to stand up for two hours. (the 43rd chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty) the third chapter of Wu Chengen's journey to the West in Ming Dynasty (all over the world and mountains are covered in nine secluded places and ten categories are removed), "one day, in this cave. ... all drunk. " The 43rd chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: "in two hours, Li Kui was drunk." In Volume 24 of the book of the first moment, I was surprised: "on the one hand, I paid the traveling boy separately to prepare the dinner, and watched him flatter and persuade them, which made the Hui merchants drunk." "The eighty second chapter of the romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties:" if you see that Li Bai occupies a street seat, and there is a Hydrangea in a bottle on the table, you can drink it alone. You are drunk and still hold a cup in your hand. " Chapter 024 of three heroes and five righteousness by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty: first, Qu Shen loves to drink; second, Li keeps his mind; second, he makes two concessions for three times, and then he makes Qu Shen drunk. He can't even say what he says, so he can't talk.
Chinese PinYin : mǐng dǐng dà zuì
be dead drunk
the rich men dare not sit right under the eaves. zuò bù chuí táng
both intelligent and courageous. zhì yǒng shuāng quán
the fallen grass and sinking cesspool. piāo yīn luò hùn