fragile
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ru ò B ù J ī NF ē ng, which means that people are fragile and can't stand the wind. It comes from the poem "Jiang Yu you Huai Zheng Dian Shi" written by the poet Du Fu of Tang Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Ban: bear. It describes a delicate body that can't stand the wind. It is often used to describe a woman's delicate body or a sick person's weak body.
The origin of Idioms
Du Fu of the Tang Dynasty wrote in his poem Jiang Yu you Huai Zheng Dian set up: "the waves have been scattered, the shore has been hit, the weak clouds are in disorder, and the wind can't help it."
Idiom grammar
It is used as predicate, complement, attribute and object to describe a woman's delicate posture. Example: she looks like a weak woman. She has a headache when the cold wind blows. if we do not take part in labor, we will also be infected with bourgeois ideology, and weak. A review of Mao Dun's short stories in 1960
fragile
be chivalrous and fond of doing good deeds - xíng xiá hào yì
unable to distinguish between the clear and muddy - qīng zhuó tóng liú