Drunk and decadent
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Zu ì sh ā NTU í D ǎ o, which means to describe drunkenness. It comes from Rongzhi, a new account of the world.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, wrote Rongzhi, a new account of the world: "Uncle Ji is a man in the night, and the rock is like a lonely pine; he is drunk, and the puppet Russia is like a jade mountain, and it will collapse."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. example at that time, the place of singing and appreciating was drunk and decayed, and there were piles of flying debris. The Song Dynasty Shi Xiaoyou's poem "man Tingfang · CI fan GUI's memory of Luoyang plum"
Chinese PinYin : zuì shān tuí dǎo
Drunk and decadent
fat , find grain and brocade. gāo liáng jǐn xiù
Follow the rooster and the dog. jià jī suí jī,jià gǒu suí gǒu
The sound of birds and the heart of beasts. niǎo shēng shòu xīn