The meat is raw from the inside
Bi Li rousheng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ì L ǐ R ò ush ē ng, which means to describe living a comfortable life for a long time and doing nothing. It comes from the history of the Three Kingdoms, Shu Shu, biography of the former leader.
The origin of Idioms
Pei Songzhi's annotation in the annals of the Three Kingdoms · Shu Shu · biography of the first master quoted Sima Biao's Jiuzhou spring and Autumn Annals of Jin Dynasty: "Bei said:" I always keep my body close to the saddle, and my thigh meat disappears; now I don't ride again, but my thigh meat grows. "
Idiom usage
I'm not going to ride now, but I'm not going to live in my legs.
Idiom story
At the end of the Eastern Han Dynasty, Liu Bei lost his territory in the battle with Cao Cao and went to Liu Biao. One day, Liu Biao set up a banquet to comfort him. During the dinner, Liu Bei went to the toilet to touch his thigh and found that the meat on it had grown up again. When he returned to his seat, he could not help feeling that the restoration of Hanshi would be successful?
The meat is raw from the inside
racing together bridle to bridle - bìng jià qí qū
share together danger and safety - ān wēi yǔ gòng
proceeding to action with fear or anxiety - lín shì ér jù