Hair transplant
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh í f à Chu à NGU à n, which means to plant hair and wear crown. It comes from the new words of the world.
Idiom explanation
The hair is straight and the hat is up. Describes a state of anger or enthusiasm. You've got your hair planted.
The origin of Idioms
"Wen Qiaochu came to cross the river for Liu Kun's envoy" in Shi Shuo Xin Yu · Yu Yu. Liu Xiao quoted Jin Pei Qi's Yu Lin: "Wen Gong just came in, his posture was very crude, and he was shocked when he sat together. After sitting down, Chen said that the nine clothes were broken up, and the royal family was relaxed, so did the kings and ministers of Jin Dynasty. It's said that the world can't be without its own owners. People who hear about it are eager to plant their hair and wear their crowns. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Analysis of Idioms
Hair transplanting
Chinese PinYin : zhí fà chuān guàn
Hair transplant
Zhiyuan has a heavy responsibility. zhì yuǎn rèn zhàng
Fear of death and greed for life. pà sǐ tān shēng
be always in grief and prone to illness. duō chóu shàn bìng