smoke opium
Swallowing clouds and puffing mist, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ū NY ú NT ǔ w ù. It originally describes Taoist cultivation, not eating grains, and later allowing people to smoke. It comes from the Fu of Jiao Ju.
The origin of Idioms
In the Fu of Jiao Ju written by Liang and Shen Yue in the Southern Dynasty, it is said that "at the beginning of the meal, the mist will be spit out, and at the end, the shadow will be reflected."
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's a predicate; it's ironic. But now we only hear that many people are lying and puffing, but few of them are drunk like foreign sailors. Lu Xun's collection of southern and Northern tunes: family is the basis of China
smoke opium
behave tyrannously without justice - bào nüè wú dào
agreement is difficult if there are too many people - rén duō zuǐ zá