Hold out one's strength and use one's strength to drink
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is "Zhang Nong Q ì sh ǐ Ji ǔ", which means self willed and drunken. It comes from the biography of Cui Zhan in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Rely on: rely on; make: laissez faire. Refers to willful drunkenness.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of Cui Zhanzhuan in the book of the Northern Qi Dynasty: "he is a close friend of Li Kuan in Zhao county. When he returned to the East, Zhan Yi's book said, "I always do wrong when I'm strong enough to drink, especially when I'm in the Qing Dynasty."
Chinese PinYin : zhàng qì shǐ jiǔ
Hold out one's strength and use one's strength to drink
acknowledge the superiority of. xiàng ruò ér tàn
The rat swindles the dog and the thief. shǔ cuàn gǒu dào
the feelings of the people are for. rén xīn guī xiàng