Have fun
As an idiom, it can be used as predicate, object and attribute. It comes from the first episode of Xuanhe anecdotes: "besides, Huizong was a romantic and happy official. Seeing the scenery of the imperial capital, how could he not pursue pleasure."
The origin of Idioms
The first episode of Xuanhe anecdotes: "besides, Huizong was a romantic and happy official. Seeing the scenery of the imperial capital, how could he not pursue pleasure."
Idioms and allusions
You talk about having fun. "Xuanhe legacy" the first episode: "not to mention Huizong is a romantic and happy official, seeing the scenery of the imperial capital, how not to pursue pleasure." Jiang Shiquan of the Qing Dynasty wrote in Linchuan dream · Shuo Meng: "if you wear that pink skull, you will have fun, and if you marry a chicken and a dog, you will have disaster." The fourth chapter of the wizard of Oz: "it is said that Wen Ruyu lives in the three Zheng families, but he can't care about his mother's filial piety. In terms of human feelings and natural principles, he just wants to have fun." It is also called "chasing after pleasure". The third part of Li Chun Tang written by Wang Shifu in Yuan Dynasty: "qiongying, when you go there, you can have a good life and have fun. You must make the prime minister happy." "Romance of the Three Kingdoms" chapter 119: "pursuit of joy, smile open, do not read the danger of a little sad."
Discrimination of words
To pursue pleasure
Chinese PinYin : zhuī huān qǔ lè
Have fun
the dead man has not yet become cold. gǔ ròu wèi hán
A thief, a minister and a rebellious son. zéi chén nì zǐ
come down in one continuous line. yī mài xiāng chéng
Sell cheap and sell expensive. fàn jiàn mài guì
great pains taken in working out a scheme. kùn xīn héng lǜ