There is no smoke
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y ǒ UQ ì w ú y ā n, which means that the family is very poor and has no rice to cook. It's from a warning to the world.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty's the general admonition of the world Volume 32: "since Li Jia was here, he's been a jerk for more than a year, not to mention new customers, even old customers have been cut off. It's clear that when he took over Zhong Kui, he didn't even have a kid to come to his house. He made my mother's family smoke-free. What did it look like? "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, adverbial or attributive; used in writing.
Chinese PinYin : yǒu qì wú yān
There is no smoke
scattered far from their homes. dàng xī lí jū
make endless exorbitant demands on. zhū qiú wú yǐ
the family is in straitened circumstances. jiā dào zhōng luò