Bequeathed hairpin
Yi Zan duo Er, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y í Z ā NDU òě R, which means to describe drinking happily but not sticking to one's appearance. It comes from the funny biographies of historical records.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: Yier Dang Zan, Yier Dang Zan
Idiom usage
Thank you for your daughter's thought, for your hairpin's falling, for your noble heart, and for your brocade. Narration of Huizhu jiangwentong collection by Hu Zhiji in Ming Dynasty
The origin of Idioms
"If it is a meeting of Zhoulu, where men and women sit together, drink wine and leave the pot behind, and lead each other to Cao. There is no punishment for shaking hands. You can't help but see that there is a falling ear in front of you and a hairpin behind you. You can drink eight duels and get drunk with two ginseng." In Tang Dynasty, Yu Shinan's "there are chariots and horses traveling in the gate": "the dangerous string urges the column to play" Bayu ", and the remains of the hairpin fall to Er to solve Luoli."
Bequeathed hairpin
nourish the living and bury the dead -- do one 's duty - sòng wǎng shì jū
Lose the liver and write the gall - shū gān xiě dǎn
sound on the whole though defective in details - dà chún xiǎo cī
The moon is dark and the wind is high - yuè hēi fēng gāo