the lofty sentiments of fearing no hardships in the open
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is m ù Ti ā nx í D ì. Originally described as open-minded, now describes the hard life of working in the field. It's also used to describe being open-minded. It comes from Ode to wine by Liu Ling of Jin Dynasty.
terms
Interpretation: take the sky as the curtain and the earth as the seat to describe the casual and broad-minded.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Ling's Ode to wine virtue in Jin Dynasty: "the sun and the moon are the moon, and the eight wastelands are the courtyards and the thoroughfares. There is no frog in the line, and there is no room in the house. The sky and the earth are like this. "
Idioms and allusions
There is a great man, who takes heaven and earth as a dynasty and Wanqi as a moment. The sun and the moon are the moon, and the eight wastelands are the courtyards. There is no frog in the line, and there is no room in the house. The curtain of heaven and the floor of the earth. To stop is to hold the Gu, to move is to hold the pot. Only wine is business, how can you know the rest. There is a gentleman, a gentleman and a scholar. When you hear about me, talk about why. It's a face full of anger. Chen said etiquette, right and wrong. Mr. Fang then holds the poppy to bear the trough, holds the cup to rinse the mash. If you are struggling with your beard, you will be lying down. Carefree, happy. Drunk and awake. Listen to the sound of the thunder, familiar with the shape of Mount butai. Do not feel the cold and heat of the cut muscle, desire feelings. Overlooking all things, disturbing Yan like duckweed in Jianghan. The two great men are on the side, like the moths and moths.
Idiom usage
As subject, attributive, clause; refers to outdoor life.
example sentence
Bai Juyi's Xiaoting also has the moon: "the guests are scattered in the afterlife. When they are drunk, they will sing alone. The curtain of heaven and the ground, who Nai Liu Ling He the third fold of Ma Zhiyuan's Chen Tuan Gao Wo: "when sleeping, the sky and the earth are on the curtain, and the black minions are quiet." Chapter 63 of Wu Chengen's journey to the West: "brothers, in front of the stars and moonlight, raise their glasses to talk about the past."
Analysis of Idioms
Sleeping in the open
Chinese PinYin : mù tiān xí dì
the lofty sentiments of fearing no hardships in the open
thick with leaves and deep-rooted. gēn shēn yè mào
sth. unfortunate , esp. death. yī cháng liǎng duǎn