New banquet
Xinhun Yan'er, pronounced x ī NH ū NY à n ě R, is an idiom, which refers to the joy of marriage. It comes from Zhang Xuecheng's "general meaning of literature and history · literature and science".
Explanation: the same as "newly married".
Source: Zhang Xuecheng's general meaning of literature and history, Wen Li, in the Qing Dynasty: "it means that if you have to use this sad feeling to appreciate the bright moon and listen to the rain, you will not believe it when you meet a good friend or a new banquet."
Usage: used as predicate and attributive; used by newlyweds
Chinese PinYin : xīn hūn yàn ěr
New banquet
new problems crop up unexpectedly. jié wài shēng zhī
have the strong willpower that can make an arrow pierce even stone. shè shí yǐn yǔ
kill a chicken with a butcher 's big knife. niú dāo gē jī
to show one 's determination to fight to the last. jì hé fén zhōu