hardship of travel without shelter
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ā NF ē ngs ù Shu ǐ, which means to describe the hard journey. It's from "seeing you off.".
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong, Ming Dynasty, said in his farewell to guazhier: "it's better to be at ease at home than to run a thousand times profit. It's easy to change your face. "
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: food, dew and water
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in travel life. Let's also say that Tianrui took his wife and had a good time all the way. It was nothing more than getting off the horse at the bridge and going on the boat at the ferry. Volume 3 of the first book
hardship of travel without shelter
feel indignant at the injustice - yì fèn tián xiōng
Against arrogance and against fullness - fǎn jiāo pò mǎn
Old age and death do not communicate with each other - lǎo sǐ bù xiāng wǎng lái
great capacity for drinking and poetry - dǒu jiǔ bǎi piān