moan and groan without being ill
The Chinese idiom, w ú B ì ngsh ē NY í n in pinyin, means to groan blindly without illness; it refers to sighing and sighing when there is nothing to be sad about; it also refers to literary works that have no real feelings and put on airs.
Idiom explanation
Groan: the low groan of illness.
The origin of Idioms
Song Xin Qiji's linjiangxian poem: "a hundred years, a hundred years of heart, more happy to sigh, no disease also groan."
Idiom usage
Serial verb; predicate, object; derogatory.
Examples
Later, it was also ~. On scholar's sour Qi by Zhu Ziqing
Yuan Liu Xun's "general discussion on seclusion · poetry I": "however, there must be something to do If you are not sick and moan, though you run through the waves and walk through the rocks, you can move people's hearts, how can you mend the way? "
Li Zhi of Ming Dynasty wrote in the book of Fujiao Yiyuan: "the writing is not developed at the time of feeling, or comes from the family's classic painting of Kangji, which has been difficult for thousands of years. All of them are groaning without illness and can't work."
Qingkongkong's master "how unreasonable": ancient literati despise each other and shout loudly. For example, helping the blind to fall, today's literati despise each other, moan without illness, often trapped in the innocent in the unexpected.
Zhu Ziqing's on the scholar's sour Qi: "Zhu Zi said in the differentiation of Chu Ci that the works imitated by the Han people were" gentle in poetry and not deep in meaning. If they were forced to groan without any pain and illness ", they are called" groaning without illness. "
Lu Xun's just a collection - a brief talk on Hong Kong: "I still have time to remember that Guangdong friend on the ship. Although he is nervous, he may not be moaning without illness."
Chinese PinYin : wú bìng shēn yīn
moan and groan without being ill
Boil ginger and drink vinegar. áo jiāng xiā cù
have grandiose aims but puny abilities. yǎn gāo shǒu dī
have the same likes and dislikes. yì qì xiāng dé