rich men 's sons
Gaoyuzi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā oy ú Z ǐ D ì, which means the children of a rich family. From the preface to the book of songs.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Zhongrong's preface to the book of poetry in the Southern Dynasty: "so the sound of mediocrity is mixed, and each person is tolerant, so that the children are full of shame, and they are embellished in the whole dynasty and moan every night."
Idiom usage
As the subject, object, attribute; refers to the children of rich families. Sugar selling children are just as important to me as I am to fat children. "Fragrant snow sea · little waves" by Ke Ling
rich men 's sons
be cheap and at the same time very good - jià lián wù měi
thump the table and praise the excellence of a thing - pāi àn jiào jué
no one picks up what 's left by the wayside - dào bù jǔ yí