Dye the hair and seed the teeth
Dyed hair and teeth, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ǎ nx ū zh ǒ ngch ǐ, which means dyed hair and inlaid false teeth, to cover up aging, from the book "year old night you Xing".
The origin of Idioms
Lu You of the Song Dynasty wrote a poem named "Youxing at the end of the year": "I am quick to cure the coffin by Buzhong, and I laugh at people who are crazy."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attributive, object; used of the elderly.
Chinese PinYin : rǎn xū zhǒng chǐ
Dye the hair and seed the teeth
charge into the enemy ranks. chōng fēng xiàn ruì
one 's love for scholars is equal to one 's thirst for water. ài cái rú kě
universe of 1000000000 universes. dà qiān shì jiè
have a squeeze hold on the enemy by slapping his back and strangling his throat. è hóu fǔ bèi
limited knowledge or experience. chán bù zhī xuě