Golden mink wine
Jindiao is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ī NDI ā OQ ǔ Ji ǔ, which means to take off the golden crown for good wine. The description does not stick to etiquette and law and indulges in drinking. The same as "exchange wine for golden mink". It comes from "feeling the favor of emperor Zhenjiang waiting for gate".
The origin of Idioms
In Song Dynasty, Mao Pang's poem "feeling Huang en waiting for gate in Zhenjiang", it is said that the word "Yin" blows Sheng, while the word "jindiao" draws wine
Analysis of Idioms
Jindiao exchange wine
Idiom usage
Be an object or attribute; be a person
Golden mink wine
all blend into one harmonious whole - hún rán yī tǐ
messengers of the gods and spirits - shén chāi guǐ shǐ
It's cloudy in the mountains and snowy at night - shān yīn yè xuě
The emperor is worthy of his painstaking efforts - huáng tiān bù fù kǔ xīn rén