romantic themes ; to waste money in houses of ill repute
Snow, moon and wind, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xu ě Yu è f ē nghu ā, meaning four seasons scenery. It refers to the love between men and women. It comes from the flower of the pink butterfly by Guan Yunshi in Yuan Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan guanyunshi's "Pink Butterfly Flower" divertimento: "since ancient times, there are many chants, but everything is OK."
Idiom usage
In Yuan and Li Rihua's the story of the South and west chamber, the red lute on the moon: "in order to laugh and play, the two families will not make a pile of right and wrong." Shao Yong, Song Dynasty, wrote at the beginning and end of volume 20 of Yichuan soil attack collection: "Yao Fu loves to recite poetry, in order to see sages and sages. The sun, the moon, the stars, Yao, and the river, Huai, Yu and Ping. The emperor and his uncle were praised and criticized, but the snow, the moon and the wind were not appreciated. It's not true that the ancients had no canon, but Yao Fu loved to recite poems. "
Chinese PinYin : xuě yuè fēng huā
romantic themes ; to waste money in houses of ill repute
birds of the same feather flock together. shēng qì xiāng qiú
show all sorts of ugly behaviours. chǒu tài bǎi chū
husband and wife by the first marriage. jié fà fū qī