A fish in the stomach is a meat in the stomach
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is y ú n à IR à UB à I, which generally refers to deteriorated food. It comes from the Analects of Confucius, the local party.
Interpretation of Idioms
Discouragement: rotten fish; failure: rotten meat. Rotten fish and rotten meat. Generally refers to the deterioration of food.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Xiang Dang: "food is not tired of essence, and food is not tired of delicacy. If you eat meat, you will lose it
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it refers to bad food.
Chinese PinYin : yú něi ròu bài
A fish in the stomach is a meat in the stomach
it is difficult to start charity as it can not be stopped halfway. shàn mén nán kāi
White sand is in Nirvana, black with it. bái shān zài niè,yǔ zhī jù hēi
fall because of internal strife. yú làn ér wáng
similarly afflicted people pity each other. tóng bìng xiāng lián