be married to a bad husband
Tianzamwanglang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ti ā NR ǎ NGW á NGL á ng, which means that there are such people in heaven and earth. It comes from Xianyuan, a new story of the world.
The origin of Idioms
In Xianyuan, a new account of the world, written by Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "an uncle has adazhonglang; a group of brothers have Feng, Hu, Yan and Mo, but Wang Lang is not in the world."
Idiom story
In the Jin Dynasty, Xie Daokai, a famous heroine among women, married Wang Ningzhi, Wang Xizhi's son. Because her talent was higher than Wang Ningzhi's, she was very dissatisfied. Uncle Xie an often comforted her, hoping that she would not despise him and that the couple would live in harmony. But Xie Daokai still couldn't help sighing: "there is Wang Lang in the earth." Originally, Xie Daokai expressed his dissatisfaction with her husband, Wang Ningzhi, in front of his family elders.
Idiom usage
I'm not satisfied with my husband. Qiu Jin's Jingwei stone 4
Chinese PinYin : tiān rǎng wáng láng
be married to a bad husband
Being a monk for a day and hitting a clock for a day. zuò yī tiān hé shàng zhuàng yī tiān zhōng
to have an irascible temperament. cuō yán rù huǒ
leave a good name for posterity. bǎi shì liú fēn
the stars and moon vie with each other in brightness. xīng yuè jiāo huī
make up for lack of natural talent by hard work. jiāng qín bǔ zhuō