laugh loud and clap one 's hands
Fuzhangxiaoxiao, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f à zh à NGD à Xi à o, which means clapping hands and laughing. It describes being very happy. It's from a new account of the world: mistakes.
Idiom explanation
Fu: Pat.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote a new saying of the world: mistakes: "emperor fuzhang laughs."
Idiom usage
He is happy in his heart. In the three dreams written in the bamboo slips of Bai Xing in Tang Dynasty, the witch caresses his hands and laughs, saying that his contemporaries say, "it's like a dream." In the fourth chapter of the romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "so all the officials cried, and one of them sat with his hands and laughed." Chapter 31 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: Feng Jiyin said: "Feng heard that the LORD was defeated in prison, and he said with a smile: I can't find out what I expected!" "Chu Ke Pai an amazement" Volume 19: "the Duke of Qi, listen to the explanation, caress his hands and laugh." He was so happy that he couldn't help laughing.
laugh loud and clap one 's hands
discard all desires and worries from one 's mind - qīng jìng wú wéi
Analysis of doubts and correction of fallacies - xī yí kuāng miù
reconcile oneself to one 's situation - suí yù ér ān
A beautiful woman has a bad life - jiā rén bó mìng
The male sings the female harmoniously - xióng chàng cí hé