The past
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is y í Lu ò sh ì sh ì, which means forgetting and abandoning worldly affairs. It comes from the biography of Ruan Ji in the book of Jin.
Idiom explanation
It refers to forgetting and abandoning worldly things.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Ruan Ji in the book of Jin: "I heard that the people in the infantry kitchen camp are good at brewing, and there are 300 pieces of wine, so I want to be an infantry captain. In the end of the world, although I went to assist my position, I would like to have a banquet in Hengyou mansion. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
Qingguan's "Songlin literature" says that it's a thing of the past. It's compiled in the morning and evening, and it doesn't know the way to travel, and it doesn't know the heat and cold to sit. ——Chen Kangqi's a chronicle of langqian in Qing Dynasty (Volume 9)
Chinese PinYin : yí luò shì shì
The past
a daily increase in population. shēng chǐ rì fán
one 's eyes grow round with delight at the sight of money. jiàn qián yǎn kāi
see off the old and welcome the new. sòng gù yíng xīn