Fat, sweet, light and warm
Fat, sweet, light and warm, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f é Ig ā NQ ī ngnu ǎ n, meaning to live well. It comes from Mencius, the first king of Liang Hui.
The origin of Idioms
In the Warring States period, Mencius · Liang Hui Wang Shang written by Mencius · Mencius Ke: "is it not enough to be fat and sweet? Light and warm is not enough for body and body? "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in life
Examples
Wang Fuzhi's "the complete collection of reading four books · Mencius · King Liang Hui Chapter 14" in the Qing Dynasty: for example, King Liang Xiang, who was determined that there could be no one in the world, had only lived a life of warmth and contentment.
Liu Dakui of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his book the biography of the virtuous and chivalrous men of the Tang Dynasty: "the ancient gentleman was determined to be an official rather than a housewife."
Fat, sweet, light and warm
hide and cover from place to place - dōng yǎn xī zhē
a floating family and a drifting abode - fú jiā fàn zhái