squander recklessly
Extravagance, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qi ó ngsh ē J í ch ǐ, which means extreme luxury, enjoyment, debauchery and corruption. It comes from the biography of Lu Kang in the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Poverty: extreme; extravagance, extravagance: luxury.
The origin of Idioms
Fan Ye's biography of Lu Kang in the book of the later Han Dynasty in the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty: in the last time, he failed to be the master, he was extravagant and extravagant, and his affectation was groundless.
Idiom usage
It refers to extreme luxury. The speech of Tang Yu Lin by Wang Dang of Song Dynasty: Guo Shang's father made great achievements, became a general, and was extremely extravagant. The poem "jinyangmen" by Zheng Yu in Tang Dynasty: the four sides are abstemious and indulgent, and the extravagance is extravagant and lavish.
squander recklessly
like to do grandiose things to impress people - hào dà xǐ gōng
one 's happiness seemed to have dropped from the heavens - xǐ cóng tiān jiàng
check erroneous ideas at the outset - fáng wēi dù jiàn