smell of the baby
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ǔ Xi ù w è Ig ā n, meaning that the smell of milk on the body has not faded. A term used to describe a person who is childish, unreasonable and contemptuous of young people. It comes from the book of the Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"Hanshu · Gaodi Ji Shang": "it's bad mouthed, you can't be Hanxin."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; predicate, attribute, object; derogatory. The 20th volume of Ling Mengchu's the second quarter of the Ming Dynasty: "although there are two nephews, they are not born of their elder sister, and they are still wet; who will check them?" 2. "It's not bad to listen to these stories as small talk, but if someone believes them and does as they should, they will become a kind of jihad." (Lu Xun's qijieting essays: difficult to do and disbelief) 3. "Cheng Yao, measure her a yellow haired girl, you can't escape from me!" (Chapter 27 of red rock by Luo guangbin)
Idioms and allusions
Song Renzong orders Yang Wenguang, the young son of Yang Zongbao, to go to Jiaoshan to pick up the imperial treasure that Du Yueying robbed. He leads the army to go, but is defeated by Dou Jingu, Du Yueying and Feiyun and becomes their bridegroom. Later generations wrote poems to prove that Wen Guang was not dry, but led his troops to take treasure to Jiaoshan.
Chinese PinYin : rǔ xiù wèi gān
smell of the baby
destroy evils before they become apparent. dù jiàn fáng wēi
patch up a quarrel and reconcile the parties concerned. xī shì níng rén