A new woman in three days
Three day bride, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NR ì x ī NF ù, which means that in the old days, a three-day bride could not behave by herself. A person who is constrained by metaphor. It comes from the biography of Cao Jingzong in the book of Liang.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Cao Jingzong in the book of Liang Dynasty, "Jingzong said to his relatives:" now I'm a noble man in Yangzhou. I can't change my mind. I can't drive on the road, but I can't say anything. Close the car, such as a three-day bride. This is a place where people are not angry. "
Idiom usage
There are plenty of them, but the situation is like a horse, and they are as timid as ~. Kang Youwei's Guang Yi Zhou Shuang Ji · Ti Bian
Chinese PinYin : sān rì xīn fù
A new woman in three days
it is advancing sometimes to seem retreating. jìn dào ruò quán