Haihuaixiaxiang
Haihuaixiaxiang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h ǎ Ihu á IXI á Xi ǎ ng, which originally means Xianyou. After that, it refers to the thought of traveling and living in seclusion. It comes from Li Bai's autumn evening book.
The origin of Idioms
Li Bai of Tang Dynasty wrote the poem "Haihuai knot Cangzhou, Xia want to visit Chicheng"
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in life, etc. It's not my business to solve the problem of burning orchids. It's just that the spring water rises. "Maipitang" by Zhu YIZUN in Qing Dynasty
Haihuaixiaxiang
avoid the difficult and choose the easy - bì nán jiù yì
Be a monk for one day and strike a clock for one day - zuò yī rì hé shàng zhuàng yī rì zhōng
give a swift glance and practise fawning - yān shì mèi xíng