simmer with laughter
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ě NJ ù Nb ù J ī n, meaning can't help laughing. It comes from the collection of yinhualu · Zhengbu by Zhao Xun of Tang Dynasty.
usage
To be formal; to be predicate, attribute, adverbial; to laugh. example Feng Zhongpu (Zongpu), "Purple vine waterfall": it's like a smile that can't help but smile, it's about to bloom.
source
The fifth volume of "Yin Hua Lu Zheng bu" written by Zhao Yu of Tang Dynasty: "the seal of the 24 departments of Shangshu Province, the story, the zhiting of Xinna." Yu Qing of Yang Qian state was appointed as the member of the Ministry of official affairs, wailang. He began to set up a cabinet to store the cabinet. Zhou Rong was a doctor of the Ministry of official affairs. On the book, he wrote the words: "when there are thousands and thousands, I can't help laughing, I'll take the exam."
Discrimination
They are too happy to laugh, too dumb to laugh, too handsome to laugh
Chinese PinYin : rěn jùn bù jìn
simmer with laughter
make a law only to fall foul of it oneself. zuò fǎ zì bì
with much land and few people. dì guǎng rén xī
as a man amongst the womenfolk. nǚ zhōng zhàng fū
Three is like a man, seven is like a ghost. sān fēn xiàng rén,qī fēn xiàng guǐ