Heihara Duyou
Pingyuan Duyou, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p í ngyu á nd ū y ó u, which means the argot of bad wine and turbid wine. It comes from Shuo Xin Yu Shu Jie.
Idiom explanation
Plain: ancient place name; Duyou: ancient official name. The argot of bad wine and turbid wine.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote in his book Shishuoxinyu Shuo Jie: "Duke Huan has a master's book. He is good at wine, and he always tastes it first. The good one is called" qingzhouzhuo ", and the bad one is called" Pingyuan Duyou. "
Idiom usage
It's all about Qingzhou. It's about Pingyuan. The 96th chapter of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty
Idiom story
In the Wei and Jin Dynasties, one of Huan Wen's directors was good at distinguishing the quality of wine. He called good wine "Qingzhou engaged in" because there was a Qi County in Qingzhou, which was homophonic with navel, and the strength of good wine always reached navel. The second wine is called "Pingyuan Duyou", because there is a county in Pingyuan County, which has the same pronunciation as the diaphragm. The strength of the second wine can only reach between the chest and abdomen.
Heihara Duyou
act without due consideration and end up in failure - jí lù wú yú
a man should take a wife and a woman should take a husband - nán hūn nǚ pìn
be honored with high official titles - gāo guān zūn jué
dedicate oneself to one's writings - yǎng wū zhù shū