with tangled hair and plain clothes
Lu à NT ó UC à f ú, which means not to dress up.
Lu à NT ó UC à f ú explains dishevelled hair and casual clothes. It is used to describe a dress without grooming. Wang Yanhong's poem "the individual" was written in Ming Dynasty: "his face was red, but he sat down at the beginning. He was dishevelled and dressed badly, and he always fell in love with the city." Bing Xin's my student: "I am ~, and the children cry and make noise." synonyms are rough and untidy words are explained separately: messy head: 1. Fingers are messy. 2. Confusion. [source] in the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Liu Yiqing's new sayings of the world, Rongzhi, it is good for Pei to make Gongjun Rongyi take off his crown and be rude. At that time, people thought it was a jade man. " [example] Wang Yanhong's poem "the individual" in the Ming Dynasty "two faces break red, but at the beginning, they sit in a mess and wear rough clothes, and always pour out the city." Wang Shizhen, Ming Dynasty, wrote a little bamboo slip of Zhu Xizhe, which said: "the book is very scribbled, and the knot is always good. What Jin people say is that uncle Pei is rude and self-improvement." critics of the Qing Dynasty commented on Li Yu's words: "Mao, Xishi, beautiful women in the world. Make up is good, light make-up is also good, rough and messy, do not cover the national color. Feiqing, make up. End oneself, light makeup also. After the Lord is rough and disobedient use the combined form as object, complement and attribute to describe unsophisticated dress
with tangled hair and plain clothes
take measures only when in urgency - kě ér chuān jǐng
dishes and wine cups from dinner were piled up at random - bēi pán láng jí
houses have adequate supplies and people live in contentment - jiā jǐ mín zú