dissipated young sets who take a fancy to lewdness
The Chinese idiom, y ó UF à NGL à ngdi é in pinyin, means someone who is frivolous and flirtatious. From the Ming Dynasty Gu Dadian "Qingshan Ji Pei Xing private sigh".
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; of a lecher
Examples
How can sisters dress fresh clothes, and make the bees, waves and butterflies a fan.
Analysis of Idioms
Play with bees and butterflies
The origin of Idioms
Gu Dadian of the Ming Dynasty wrote in Pei Xing's private sigh in the story of Qingshan: "if you don't forgive each other, you are born lazy to chase and laugh."
Idiom explanation
It refers to a person who has a frivolous attitude and is good at teasing women.
Chinese PinYin : yóu fēng làng dié
dissipated young sets who take a fancy to lewdness
conversant with things present and past. tōng jīn dá gǔ
respect one , you should not give him or her a present or repeatedly express it. xīn dào shén zhī
overcome all worldly thoughts and enter sainthood. chāo fán rù shèng