Ringing bells
Ming Zhong lie Ding, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m í ngzh ō ngli è D ǐ ng, which means the luxurious life of ancient noble officials. It comes from Xijing Fu by Zhang Heng of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the ode to Xijing written by Zhang Heng of the Han Dynasty, it is said that "beating the bell and eating the food, even riding the horse."
Idiom usage
It's used as an object and attributive. It's used as an example of life. It's used to describe Fengwu Huaqi, who moved his family in consideration of Penghao, and it's used to describe chenhuo. Wang Ji and Chen Shuda borrow the book of Sui Ji in Tang Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : míng zhōng liè dǐng
Ringing bells
advance by an inch but retreat by a foot -- to lose much more than what one gets. jǐn cùn tuì chǐ
so hot on stones that gold might have melted there. shuò yù liú jīn
leave only after each has enjoyed himself to the utmost. jìn huān ér sàn
tremble with fear on hearing of. wén fēng sàng dǎn
All changes are inseparable from their ancestors. wàn biàn bù lí qí zōng