Hold on to wine
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ǎ Ji ǔ ch í á o, which means drinking with crab claws. The ancients regarded it as a great pleasure in life. It comes from the biography of Bi Zhuo in the book of Jin.
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of Jin, biography of Bi Zhuozhuan: "Zhuo tasted and said," if you get hundreds of wine in the boat, you can put it at two ends at four o'clock, hold the wine cup in your right hand, and the crab claw in your left hand, and then you will have a whole life. "
Analysis of Idioms
Holding pincers to drink
Idiom usage
I don't know what time it is today. The poem of "Manjianghong · August 5 couplet" by Fu Gan
Hold on to wine
estimate one 's own moral and material strength - duó dé liàng lì
read by the light of fireflies - náng yíng zhào shū
be by nature unconventional and straight forward - luò pò bù jī
The sea is boiling over the river - hǎi fèi jiāng fān