One hunger and two satiety
One hunger and two satiety, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ī J ī Li ǎ NGB ǎ o, which means you can't have enough to eat every day, describing poverty. It's from xingshihengyan.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty, the seventh volume of Xingshi Hengyan: "Qian xingri gradually became a small broker to supply the owner of the family, but he was always short of money and had enough to eat."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in life.
One hunger and two satiety
to depend on under sb . 's thumb - jì rén yán xià
when one chu man loses his bow , another chu man finds it - chǔ gōng chǔ dé