royal offsprings
Tian Huang Gui Zhou is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is ti ā nhu á nggu ì zh ò u, which used to refer to the descendants of the royal family. It's from 20 years of witnessing.
Notes on Idioms
Tianhuang: royal family, clan; nobles: descendants of noble status.
The origin of Idioms
The twenty seventh chapter of Wu Jianren's twenty years of witnessing the strange situation in Qing Dynasty: "in fact, it's very pitiful. They can't do business. It's very nice to say that heaven's decoration and nobles have no vitality at all, so they have to rely on the color on the tape to cheat."
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; used in writing. Examples Zhao Erxun and others wrote in the biography of Yishan and Yijing, the imperial clan of the Qing Dynasty: "Yishan and Yijing are noble nobles, they are not familiar with the military, and they abandon their divisions one after another, just like the same thing. They can't do anything beneficial."
Chinese PinYin : tiān huáng guì zhòu
royal offsprings
return to one 's former career. chóng wēn jiù yè
the vapour rose up to the sky. qì tūn niú dǒu
bad name for thousands of years. yí chòu wàn dài
hold one 's nose and pass stopping one 's nose. yǎn bí ér guò
shut one 's door and reflect on one 's misdeeds. bì mén sī guò
break down from constant over work. jī láo chéng bìng