have a tall drink
To be clear, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is f ú y à D à B á I. Float: be punished for drinking in violation of the liquor order; white: the glass for drinking. It originally means to drink a large glass of wine, and then to drink a large glass of wine. From Shuoyuan shanshuo by Liu Xiang of Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
To drink a large glass of wine is better than to listen to the sound of tarts. (the 24th chapter of Zeng Pu's Nie Hai Hua in Qing Dynasty) (Qing Dynasty) Zhang Chao's new records of Yu Chu, Volume 13, Huang Zhouxing's biography of Cui Ying and Zhang Ling: "one day, Ling sat alone reading biography of Liu Ling, ordered the boy to drink, repeatedly read and exclaimed, and frequently hit the case to the surface."
The origin of Idioms
In Shuoyuan shanshuo written by Liu Xiang of the Han Dynasty, it is said that "when Marquis Wen of Wei and the officials drank wine, he made the public take the place of inhumanity to govern the wine. He said," those who can't drink wine will have a clear idea. "
have a tall drink
no one picks up what 's left by the wayside - dào wú shí yí
drive a cart in ragged clothes to blaze a new trail - bì lù lán lǚ
leave a lasting and pleasant impression or aftertaste - yú wèi wú qióng