A lost hairpin
Yi Zan Tuoxi, a Chinese idiom, is pronounced y í Z ā NTU ō x ì in pinyin, which means to drink freely. From Yuxin.
The origin of Idioms
In the volume of Yu Xin written by Qian Xuelun in Qing Dynasty: "in the name of worshiping God, the food is cheered and the remains of the hairpin are broken. Although it is said that men and women are divided into Cao, they look at each other face to face."
Idiom usage
Abstruse; commendatory word; combination; modern generation; as object, attribute; used in written language
Chinese PinYin : yí zān tuō xì
A lost hairpin
Deep-rooted habits are hard to give up.. jī xí nán chú
an oil lamp before the statue of buddha. qīng dēng gǔ fó
the hearts come together across the land. shuài tǔ zhái xīn
how can you bear it in your heart. yú xīn hé rěn