give up completely to natural impulse
Indulgence, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ì Q í ngz ò ngy ù, which means unrestrained indulgence. It comes from the book with Zeng Zhai written by Lu Jiuyuan of Song Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Lu Jiuyuan of Song Dynasty wrote in the book of Yu Zeng's house: "only when he was born in later generations, he lost his way of learning and was filled with heresies and heresies, so he made the people with lofty ideals suffer from this disease. He was addicted to the common people who indulged in the world. Is it not to kill the world with academic knowledge?"
Idiom usage
It means to indulge one's passion. Example: the price of rice in the south of the Yangtze River is very high, and thieves are rampant in the capital? Biography of Lu Kun in the history of Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Indulgence
Chinese PinYin : zì qíng zòng yù
give up completely to natural impulse
the glint and flash of cold steel. dāo guāng jiàn yǐng
one 's beauty was such as to overthrow cities and ruin states. qīng guó qīng chéng
generous outside but jealous inside. wài kuān nèi jì
be scared out of one 's wits. láng bèi zhōu zhāng