Sanghu pengshu
Sanghu pengshu, a Chinese idiom, is s ā NGH ù P é ngsh ū in pinyin, which means to weave mulberry branches as the door and erect awning bars as the pivot. A poor family. It comes from Huansha Ji Yiqiu.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Chenyu's "Huansha Ji · Yiqiu" in Ming Dynasty: "if Yuanxian is a good man, sanghu pengshu, Yanyuan is a good man, eating and drinking."
Chinese PinYin : sāng hù péng shū
Sanghu pengshu
open one 's heart wide and lay bare one 's thoughts. tǔ xīn tǔ dǎn
worms breed in decaying matter. wù fǔ chóng shēng
Unite one heart and one mind. tuán xīn yī zhì
Respect the time and love the day. jìng shí ài rì