loiter
Leisurely, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ō uy ō uh ū h ū, which means to describe the appearance of leisurely and lazy or trance. From Gao Tang Fu.
The origin of Idioms
Song Yu's Gao Tang Fu in the Warring States period states: "it's so leisurely that you lose yourself."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: trance, trance
Idiom usage
Grammar: used as predicate and attribute; refers to the state of a person
Examples
Wei Junyi's notes on somniloquy: "just hold your mind, purify your mind, and enter the dream leisurely."
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in Rongzhi, a new account of the world: "Liu Ling is six feet long, very ugly, and leisurely, with the shape of earth and wood."
Li Yu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in "the fate of love · refusing the spouse": "your youth is not small now, so you should fall in love with a talented man earlier, and make yourself a whereabouts.". If you just go on and on, the time will pass. I'm afraid that the limited spring will pass with the wind, but not with the wind. "
Lu Xun's letters to Xu shoushang: "there are four or five people in that bureau, but they are leisurely, careless and regard everything as a child's play."
The village of grass and insects is the third lesson in the sixth grade of primary school Chinese. I wandered all afternoon until the sun was kissing the west mountain, and the song of the red dove called my heart back.
Chinese PinYin : yōu yōu hū hū
loiter
take up a pen and complete an essay. yuán bǐ lì chéng
follow suit without knowing why. ǎi rén kàn chǎng
surpass ten years of reading. shèng dú shí nián shū
Change from the old to the new. gé xīn biàn jiù