lavish service
Xianche NUMA, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ā NCH ē n ù m ǎ, which means a brand new car, a fat horse. It describes exquisite taking and luxurious life. It comes from the book of the later Han Dynasty, the fifth Lun Zhuan.
Analysis of Idioms
Fresh car and strong horse
The origin of Idioms
According to the fifth Lun Zhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty, "the land of Shu is fertile, and the wealth of the historians is as high as tens of millions. They are all fresh and angry, and their wealth comes from their wealth."
Idiom usage
It is used as object and attributive to describe luxurious life with commendatory meaning. Example: the poem "the chronicle of Zhongmou in the river" written by he Kuang of Qing Dynasty: "the bureaucrats on the river look at each other with smile, the new envoys are welcomed with anger, and six million gold workers are set up." In Qu Jiang, a record of dramas written by Kang Pian of Tang Dynasty, it is said that "the color of the river lies on the Bank of the river, the fresh cars and strong horses, and the shoulder to shoulder strokes on the hub."
Chinese PinYin : xiān chē nù mǎ
lavish service
feel that one has not done anything wrong. mén xīn wú kuì