Three hunger and two satiety
Three hunger and two satiety, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NJ ī Li ǎ NGB ǎ o, which means a meal of hunger and a meal of satiety. It describes a difficult life. It comes from Song Huihong's lengzhaiyehua: Yefu changju.
Idiom usage
As an attributive or adverbial; used in daily life
The origin of Idioms
In Song Huihong's cold studio night talk, ye Fu's long and short sentence: "Liu Ye Fu stayed in Nanjing for a long time, but he didn't enter the capital. Yuan Cai supervised it with a book. Ye Fu replied:" the lame man has no other way in his life, so he can teach them with his hands and make them satisfied. Look back at Yunhan and talk about the spirit of yuan. "
Idiom explanation
It is also said that a meal of hunger and a meal of fullness can describe the hardship of life.
Chinese PinYin : sān jī liǎng bǎo
Three hunger and two satiety
get the chicken and lose the sheep. zhēng jī shī yáng
do things that are against reason and nature. sàng tiān hài lǐ
Look out for the white clouds. wàng duàn bái yún