feel a sense of relief
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ru ò sh ì zh ò NGF ù, which means to be relaxed and happy after being nervous. It comes from Gaozu Ji, an old book of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As a predicate, object, adverbial; refers to the elimination of tension
Examples
In addition to "regret", there is also a sense of "why bother?". No, it even means "the days of trouble are over at last.".
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: relief
The origin of Idioms
"Gaozu Ji, an old book of the Tang Dynasty:" it's better to follow the former canon, to be honored, to feel relieved, and to feel peaceful. "
Idiom explanation
Describe the past tense mood after the relaxed and happy. The same as "relief".
Chinese PinYin : ruò shì zhòng fù
feel a sense of relief
the horses and men are strong. rén qiáng mǎ zhuàng
great pains taken in working out a scheme. kùn xīn héng lǜ
an utterly inadequate measure. bēi shuǐ chē xīn
release a tiger to protect oneself -- to bring trouble on oneself while attempting to avoid it with other means. yǐn hǔ zì wèi