innocent and artless
Tianzhenlanyin, a Chinese idiom, is ti à nzh à NL à nm à n in pinyin, which means that children's thoughts are simple, lively and lovely, without affectation and hypocrisy. It comes from Wu Li Bu Shi Hua by Wu Shi Dao in Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
It describes children's simple thinking, lively and lovely, without affectation and hypocrisy.
The origin of Idioms
Wu Shidao's Wu Li Bu Shi Hua in Yuan Dynasty quoted song Gong Kai's Gao ma er Er Tu as a poem: "this son and this horse are pitiful, and the horse's three teeth are not crowned. The sky is so beautiful that it's not suitable for all clothes. "
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: innocent, naive and rotten.
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial; it is used to describe children, etc.
Chinese PinYin : tiān zhēn làn màn
innocent and artless
bide one 's time during a period of ill luck. zūn shí yǎng huì
Burn the forest and the field, and fish with all your might. fén lín ér tián,jié zé ér yú