Evening Pipit
The Chinese idiom is y ā ot ú nm ù Li ù, which means children born in old age. It comes from Suiyuan poetry by Yuan Mei of Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Mei's Sui Yuan Shi Hua in Qing Dynasty, Volume 11: "Shen Yongzhi and others are on the same list. Fifty years later, the official Yunnan Post Salt Road, begging to return sick, on the way to the letter, the road gave birth to a daughter, the rest of his life a chi. Both of them are young, so they are engaged to each other. "
Idiom explanation
It refers to children born in old age.
Chinese PinYin : yāo tún mù liù
Evening Pipit
Listen to the sound with your bones. chuāi gǔ tīng shēng
Wandering in the East and in the West. dōng zhī xī wú
houses have adequate supplies and people live in contentment. jiā yīn rén zú
dense willow trees and bright flowers. liǔ àn huā míng