New banquet
Xinhun Yan'er, pronounced x ī NH ū NY à n ě R, is an idiom, which refers to the joy of marriage. It comes from Zhang Xuecheng's "general meaning of literature and history · literature and science".
Explanation: the same as "newly married".
Source: Zhang Xuecheng's general meaning of literature and history, Wen Li, in the Qing Dynasty: "it means that if you have to use this sad feeling to appreciate the bright moon and listen to the rain, you will not believe it when you meet a good friend or a new banquet."
Usage: used as predicate and attributive; used by newlyweds
New banquet
Flies follow the tail of a steed and fly thousands of miles - yíng fù jì wěi ér zhì qiān lǐ
There are many mountains and rocks - zhòng yán dié zhàng
It's like going through fire and water - rú dǎo shuǐ huǒ
one 's mind settles as still water - xīn rú zhǐ shuǐ
leave nothing usable to the invading enemy - kōng shì qīng yě
bemoan the state of the universe and pity the fate of mankind - bēi tiān mǐn rén