said of a widow or concubine who remarried
Pipa biebao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p í P á Bi é B à o, which used to refer to women's remarriage. From Pipa Xing.
The origin of Idioms
In Bai Juyi's Pipa line in Tang Dynasty, it is said that "it comes out after a thousand calls, but it is still half covered with pipa."
Idiom usage
It refers to women's remarriage. I'm not as ruthless as this concubine, but I'm not as ruthless as this fox. The fourth volume of notes of Yuewei thatched cottage by Ji Yun in Qing Dynasty and the third volume of Zhenwen record of parrot tomb crying tomb by Meng Chengshun in Ming Dynasty: "pipa, farewell to Nanpu, lost Luan brocade book of that year. Those who know me say I have escaped from the world, and those who do not know me say I have. (Zhang Henshui's Jinfen aristocratic family) "I've received the master's kindness, but I can't repay you by vowing to death. I'm willing to take responsibility for the master. I hope the master will be at ease." (the third and fourth chapter of Huang Xiaopei's twenty year dream of prosperity in Qing Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : pí pá bié bào
said of a widow or concubine who remarried
be well-informed and suspend judgment on things in doubt. duō wén quē yí
sit side by side and talk intimately. cù xī tán xīn