Yishuixiange
Yishuixiange, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í Shu ǐ Xi á ng ē, which means to know the time, to live in the world and to have fun. It comes from the Analects of Confucius advanced.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: spring breeze in Yishui and dancing rain in Yishui
The origin of Idioms
Confucius' advanced Analects of Confucius in the pre Qin period: "he once said," those who are not in spring, have their own spring clothes. Five or six of them are crowned, and six or seven of them are children. They are bathing in Yi, dancing in the wind, and returning home. "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. Example: chongzengshan, old Sichuan and old Pingjin. Song Suzhe's poem "send Gong Dingchen to advise him to move to Qingzhou"
Yishuixiange
beat the swords into ploughshares - zhù jiàn wéi lí
Distinguish between the things and the place to live - biàn wù jū fāng
in the beginning of the heaven and the earth genesis - tiān zào cǎo mèi
plunge the people into misery and suffering - shēng líng tú tàn