the son of a rich and important family
Gao Liang Zi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā Oli á ngz ǐ D ì, which means to refer to the children of rich people who are used to enjoying life. It comes from Yan shigu's notes on urgency.
The origin of Idioms
In Yan shigu's "notes on urgency" of the Tang Dynasty, it is said that "if the gentry Xiu Yan and Gao Liang's sons are contemptuous of slang, they are ashamed of peeping, so they discard the theory of erudition and become enlightened."
Idiom usage
The seventh volume of guiqian Zhi written by Liu Qi in Yuan Dynasty: "this Cao is a child of Gao Liang, but he praises his style of decoration." Chapter 92 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms: "the Xia marquis is is the son of Gao Liang. He is weak and has no plan." "Today, people call the children of the rich family the children of the Gaoliang family. They say that they know how to eat, but they don't know how to do other things."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: Playboy, dandy, Gao Liang young
the son of a rich and important family
feel like a willow withering at the approach of autumn - pú liǔ zhī zī
cling to the habitual ways and muddle on - yīn xún gǒu qiě
Draw a picture of the land and commit a prison - huà dì zuò yù
To engage in public and private affairs - tuō gōng xíng sī
The same thing as the same thing - zhǐ shì lèi qíng