neither drink nor eat
No tea, no rice, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ù ch á B ù f à n, meaning do not want to eat. It's a matter of mind. From "save the wind".
The origin of Idioms
In Yuan Dynasty, Guan Hanqing's "save the wind and dust" the third fold: "I'm not eating, I'm just thinking about you.
Idiom usage
In a moment, the clouds and rain darken Wushan mountain. It's so dull that I can't tell you where I'm worried. (Hu Wenhuan, Ming Dynasty)
Analysis of Idioms
Don't eat, don't drink, don't think about food and tea
neither drink nor eat
drain the pond to get all the fish - hé zé ér yú
Add fuel to reduce fuel consumption - tiān bīng jiǎn zào
eulogize virtues and achievements - yǒu jiǎo yáng chūn
pay too much respect to one 's superiors and despise those who are of lower ranks - chǎn shàng ào xià
not to give up one 's gangster designs - zéi xīn bù sǐ