lascivious men
The Chinese idiom, Ku á NGF à NGL à ngdi é in pinyin, refers to a frivolous man. It's from the first time.
The origin of Idioms
Ling Mengchu of Ming Dynasty, the 11th volume of "the surprise of making a case at the first moment": the purple swallow and the yellow warbler seek the antithesis among the green willows; the wild bee and the wave butterfly seek the acquaintance among the young peach team. "
Analysis of Idioms
Bumblebee
Idiom usage
Combined; as an object; with commendatory meaning. Example: Yuan Gaoming's Pipa story: Miss Niu admonishes Shibi: "startle the charming warbler to talk to the swallow, and open up the wild butterfly and the wild bee." Scene 1 of Sichuan Opera Tan Ji'er: "one can avoid many troubles, and the other can avoid the disturbance of wild bees, waves and butterflies." "For example, young flowers protect themselves from the invasion of wild bees and butterflies in the immature stage." ——Love and proposal by Lin Yutang
lascivious men
rush forward and backward to show anxiety to serve - tuì hòu qū qián
Hold out one's strength and use one's strength to drink - zhàng qì shǐ jiǔ