To fool around
Langdang is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is di à oerl á NGD à ng. It is used to describe dishevelled appearance, loose style and not serious attitude. From the story of suppressing bandits in the mouth.
Analysis of Idioms
[explanation] it describes disheveled appearance, loose style, and not serious or serious attitude. [grammar] as predicate, attributive, adverbial; derogatory; used in spoken English [synonym] slovenly, informal, unruly, cynical, unruly, unruly, unruly, unruly, unruly, unruly, unruly, unruly, unruly, unruly
The origin of Idioms
Feng Zikai's "suppressing bandits in the mouth" said: "in the end, they did too much evil, and all of them became bad, crooked and sloppy. They didn't serve me at all."
Idiom usage
Examples
1. You can't just hang around like this all the time, OK? 2. The young man's foolishness can't make the climate. 3. Wang Shuo: "just as he said that, Shiba wandered into the backstage." Can't you just hang around like this all the time?
To fool around
one does not do what one has learned - xué fēi suǒ yòng
ingratiate oneself with someone to gain one 's ends - gǒu gǒu yíng yíng