people without sorrow and anxiety
Xihuangshangren, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x à Hu á ngsh à NgR é n, which means people before Fuxi's family, that is, people of Taigu; it refers to people who are carefree and have a leisurely life. From Yu Ziyan et al.
Idiom explanation
Xihuang: the legendary ancient emperor Fuxi.
The origin of Idioms
Tao Qian of Jin Dynasty wrote "Yu Zi Yan et al." as the saying goes, "in the middle of May and June, when you lie down at the North window and the cold wind comes, you are called emperor Xi."
Idiom usage
A carefree person; a carefree person. examples they have no dealings with the outside world and are not influenced by other nationalities. They are still in a primitive state, worthy of the so-called "emperor Xi". Lu Xun's "hot wind · people's heart is very ancient" and Liang Zhongrong's "preface to poetry": "there are frivolous people who laugh at Cao and Liu for their clumsiness. They call him emperor Bao Zhao and Emperor Xi, and Xie Tiao who walk alone in this and ancient times."
Chinese PinYin : xī huáng shàng rén
people without sorrow and anxiety
If you are full, you will lose; if you are modest, you will gain. mǎn zhāo sǔn,qiān shòu yì