There is no smoke
It's a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y ǒ UQ ì w ú y ā n, which means that the family is very poor and has no rice to cook. It's from a warning to the world.
The origin of Idioms
Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty's the general admonition of the world Volume 32: "since Li Jia was here, he's been a jerk for more than a year, not to mention new customers, even old customers have been cut off. It's clear that when he took over Zhong Kui, he didn't even have a kid to come to his house. He made my mother's family smoke-free. What did it look like? "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, adverbial or attributive; used in writing.
There is no smoke
stamp one 's feet and beat one 's chest in bitterness - diē jiǎo chuí xiōng
one 's eyes grow round with delight at the sight of money - jiàn qián yǎn hóng
considerate right down to the most trivial detail - wú wēi bù zhì
be near to worthies and keep away from mean fellows - qīn xián yuǎn nìng
a dried up tree comes to life again - kū shù shēng huā