spring outing
Shuang Gan Dou Jiu is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is Shu ā NGG ā nd ǒ Uji ǔ, which refers to the beautiful scenery in spring. It comes from the miscellany of Yunxian.
The origin of Idioms
Volume 2 of Yunxian Zaji written by Feng Zhi of the Tang Dynasty: "Dai Yongchun brings double oranges and wine. People ask him," listen to the sound of orioles. Do you know how to criticize and preach this custom? "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to a spring outing.
Examples
The poem "on the lake in spring" written by Liu Tai of Song Dynasty: "tomorrow, when you come back, you should be brilliant. You should listen to Oriole when you fight wine with two oranges."
Zhang Jing of the Ming Dynasty wrote in feiwanji mengxunshi: "look at the flowers in the Wu garden of Qinchuan. Xi Nang's Jiegu accompanies him. He pulls out his double oranges to listen to the biography of Yingchuan. His poetry is full of persuasion."
In Yimao's one hundred and forty rhymes, Wang Yudai said, "the rabbits in the three caves rest, and the two oranges listen to the Orioles."
Chinese PinYin : shuài gān dǒu jiǔ
spring outing
pacify the good and do away with the cruel. ān liáng chú bào
Nine twists of the sheep's intestines. yáng cháng jiǔ qǔ