be in a leisurely and carefree mood
Leisure is a Chinese idiom. Its pronunciation is Xi á NQ í ngy ì zh ì, which means leisurely mood and easy interest. From the 100th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen of Qing Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
Be at ease, be at ease
The origin of Idioms
The 100th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: "at this time, there are wars everywhere, and I managed to make an old Tang Shu, where I still have leisure to make this pen and ink."
Idiom usage
Combined; as an object; with irony. 1. Pu Songling's Liaozhaizhiyi Taoist in the Qing Dynasty: "why did Taoist make this play for leisure?" (2) biography of heroes and heroines written by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "the master came out this time; he was more relaxed; he was about to ask about the scenery along the way." 3. Lu Xun's Huagai collection after "hitting the wall": the ancients' so-called "writing books in poverty" is not reliable. There are so many people who are extremely poor and worried to death to write books?
Chinese PinYin : xián qíng yì zhì
be in a leisurely and carefree mood
have a high opinion of oneself. zì gāo zì dà
it 's unnecessary to go into details. wú yōng zhuì shù
start at dawn and arrive at dusk. zhāo fā xī zhì