vast wealth
Wanguanjiacai is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is w à NGU à NJI à C á I, which means to describe a rich family. From play River Pavilion.
Entry
vast wealth
Pinyin
wànguànjiācái
Citation explanation
It describes a rich family. The first discount of yuan · anonymous's play in the river Pavilion: "Niu Yu has a lot of wealth, and he is a burden in Zhao Jiangmei's family." The first discount of Guan Hanqing's "four spring garden" in Yuan Dynasty: "we have a lot of money now, and the young lady is as beautiful as a flower. She is twenty-eight years old. How can we get married with such people?" Ming Dynasty · Lanling Xiaosheng "Jin Ping Mei CI Hua" the first chapter: Zhang Dahu has thousands of family wealth and hundreds of houses. Chapter one and three of Lao Can's Travels: as the saying goes, "ten thousand Guan's family wealth" is regarded as the rich man. He has thirty thousand Guan's money. Isn't he a big rich man? The first chapter of Zongpu's "the journey to the South" is: "because of the wealth in my family, I didn't do anything for a time."
Idiom usage
To be rich is to be rich.
vast wealth
the widower , the widow , the orphan and the childless - guān guǎ gū dú
pushing forward despite repeated frustrations - bǎi zhé bù yí
phoenix singing in the morning sun -- good omen for the country - fèng míng zhāo yáng