Years of plenty
Sui fengnianren, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su ì f ē ngni á NR ě n, which means agricultural harvest. From the book of the prime minister.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Changyuan of the Tang Dynasty wrote in the book of the Prime Minister: "this year, I am rich and fertile, and the grain is cheap and the peasants are hurt. Chengyi bid to buy, real Taicang reserve
Analysis of Idioms
Nian Nian Feng
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : suì fēng nián rěn
Years of plenty
If there is no tiger in the mountain, the monkey is king. shān shàng wú lǎo hǔ,hóu zǐ chēng dà wáng
cultivate morality through acting decidedly. guǒ xíng yù dé
There is no end to brown clothes. hè yī bù wán
like a man who was drunk or dreaming. rú chī rú mèng