vast wealth
Wanguanjiacai is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is w à NGU à NJI à C á I, which means to describe a rich family. From play River Pavilion.
Entry
vast wealth
Pinyin
wànguànjiācái
Citation explanation
It describes a rich family. The first discount of yuan · anonymous's play in the river Pavilion: "Niu Yu has a lot of wealth, and he is a burden in Zhao Jiangmei's family." The first discount of Guan Hanqing's "four spring garden" in Yuan Dynasty: "we have a lot of money now, and the young lady is as beautiful as a flower. She is twenty-eight years old. How can we get married with such people?" Ming Dynasty · Lanling Xiaosheng "Jin Ping Mei CI Hua" the first chapter: Zhang Dahu has thousands of family wealth and hundreds of houses. Chapter one and three of Lao Can's Travels: as the saying goes, "ten thousand Guan's family wealth" is regarded as the rich man. He has thirty thousand Guan's money. Isn't he a big rich man? The first chapter of Zongpu's "the journey to the South" is: "because of the wealth in my family, I didn't do anything for a time."
Idiom usage
To be rich is to be rich.
Chinese PinYin : wàn guàn jiā cái
vast wealth
in poetry one gains depth after suffering. qióng ér hòu gōng
find it hard to clear oneself. tiào dào huáng hé xǐ bù qīng
trifling pecuniary assistance. dǒu shēng zhī shuǐ
modification and genuineness. xiū cí lì chéng
try every possible way to persuade sb. hǎo shuō dǎi shuō
get the opposite of what one wants. yù yì fǎn sǔn
turn a piece of poor writing into a literary gem. diǎn tiě chéng jīn