dependents of royal families
Yuye Jinzhi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ù y è J ī nzh ī, which means that it originally describes beautiful flowers and trees. The latter refers to the descendants of the royal family. Now it also refers to a person of noble or delicate birth. It's from Jin cuibao's ancient and Modern Annotation: Yufu.
The origin of Idioms
Cui Bao of Jin Dynasty wrote in the ancient and Modern Annotation of Yufu: "fighting with Chiyou in the field of Zhuolu, there are often five colors of clouds, golden branches and jade leaves, which stop on the emperor."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonyms]: Imperial relatives, Yuye Jinzhi, Yuye Jinke [antonyms]: Pengmen Jingbu, wuwufu [Xiehouyu]: the daughter of the imperial court [lantern riddle]: Jin Yushu
Idiom usage
The daughter of a rich family, the sister-in-law of a rich family, is a beautiful woman. She will get sick if she blows a wind. Sha Ting's an autumn evening
dependents of royal families
run out of ammunition and food supplies - liáng jìn yuán jué
a scoundrel hates persons of integrity - dào zēng zhǔ rén
Swallow one's voice and bear one's tears - tūn shēng rěn lèi