a solemn pledge of love
The Chinese idiom is sh ā nm é NGH ǎ ISH ì, which means to swear by the mountain and the sea. It means that the treaty and the oath are as eternal as the mountain and the sea. It also refers to the vows made by men and women when they love each other, indicating that love should be as eternal as mountains and seas. Many men and women swear to love each other sincerely and never change their heart. From the peach blossom.
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Wu Mingshi's "peach blossom" the third fold: "he vowed to the mountain and the sea, sleeping in the brocade curtain."
Idiom usage
It means to be firm and unchangeable. How can we break up now? Xin Qiji's "nanxiangzi, a gift to prostitutes" in the Southern Song Dynasty: "don't cry a little, vow to be loyal all the time."
Chinese PinYin : shān méng hǎi shì
a solemn pledge of love
the turn of fortune after reaching one extreme. bō jí bì fù
Zhu Yun breaks the threshold. zhū yún shé jiàn
Today's wine and today's drunkenness. jīn rì yǒu jiǔ jīn rì zuì