Easy to eat
Easy to eat, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ì K ǒ uy ǐ sh í, meaning the extremely miserable life of the victims. It comes from the book of the new Tang Dynasty, biography of rebellious officials, an Qingxu.
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate and attributive to describe the tragedy after the disaster
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: change one's son and eat another
The origin of Idioms
An Qingxu, the first biography of the rebellious officials in the new book of the Tang Dynasty, said: "in the city, there are stacks, and the grain is exhausted, and the food is easy to eat."
Idiom explanation
It's easy to eat. Mouth, Dingkou. Describe the extremely miserable life of the victims.
Easy to eat
drift about without any definite trace like running water or duckweed - gěng jì píng zōng
No one came down but the stairs - zhǐ tīng lóu tī xiǎng,bù jiàn rén xià lái
pillow one 's head on stream and gargle one 's mouth with pebbles - zhěn liú shù shí
The wolf leaps and the gall flies - láng tū chī zhāng