San dieyang pass
Sandiyangguan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā NDI é y á nggu ā n, which means the tune of farewell in ancient times. Later, it also refers to farewell. From Weicheng Qu.
Notes on Idioms
Sandi: sing a sentence repeatedly; Yangguan: the name of ancient Guan, in the southwest of Dunhuang County, Gansu Province.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Wei of the Tang Dynasty wrote the poem "Wei Cheng Qu": "Wei Cheng Dynasty rain and dust, guest house green willow color new. I'd like to urge you to have a glass of wine and come out of Yangguan in the west without an old friend. "
Idiom usage
It is used as an object and attribute. I've done so many things that I don't listen to my worries. I'm just worried about a sad painting. A wedge in Prince yuan's the peach land by mistake
San dieyang pass
flourishing leaves and withering flowers - lǜ féi hóng shòu
feel ashamed of one's ungainly appearance - zì cán xíng huì
Hunger is easy to eat, thirst is easy to drink - jī zhě yì wéi shí,kě zhě yì wéi yǐn
get without any labor without doing any work - bù láo ér huò
sit back and allow the situation to deteriorate - yīn xún zuò wù