Change and nourish the barren
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is bi à NL í y à NGJ í, which means to make thin wine mellow and barren soil fertile. It means to change the face of poverty and backwardness. It comes from Suiyuan poetry by Yuan Mei of Qing Dynasty.
Interpretation of Idioms
Make thin wine mellow and barren soil fertile. It means changing the face of poverty and backwardness.
The origin of Idioms
Yuan Mei's Sui Yuan Shi Hua in Qing Dynasty (Volume 11): "if the government office is everywhere, it will be able to change and nourish the barren, and the vitality will be clear: if the ancient and modern people are in one way."
Chinese PinYin : biàn lí yǎng jí
Change and nourish the barren
beauty shown to the best advantage. jìn tài jí yán
Drown oneself and starve oneself. jǐ nì jǐ jī
respect each other like guests. xiāng dài rú bīn
Drinking water and balancing. yǐn shuǐ qī héng