virtual characters
Mr. Wu you, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ū y ǒ uxi ā NSH ē ng, which means virtual names of people or things. From Zi Xu Fu.
The origin of Idioms
In Han Dynasty, Sima Xiangru's Zixu Fu: "the Chu envoy Zixu was sent to Qi, and the king sent his chariot to ride with his emissary. After all, Zixu has passed through Mr. Wu, and his death is a matter of public preservation. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to a fictitious person's name or thing. example he didn't mean to be engaged in Qingzhou six, but he turned into a gentleman. In Song Dynasty, Su Shi's poem "Zhang Zhifu sent six pots of wine, but the wine didn't reach the opera and wrote a little poem to ask about it" and "historical records · biography of Sima Xiangru": "(reading Zixu Fu and being good at it) is called to ask Xiangru Xiangru called it "Zixu" and "Xuyan" in Chu Dynasty. If "Mr. Wu you" had nothing to do with it, it was Qi Nan. " "Caigen Tan" 245: damage and damage, plant flowers and bamboo, return to Mr. Wu you as much as possible
virtual characters
rosy lips and pretty white teeth - chún hóng chǐ bái
hardship of travel without shelter - cān fēng sù xuě
acclaim as the acme or perfection - tàn guān zhǐ yǐ
no one picks up what 's left by the wayside - dào wú shí yí