receive favour from a superior
In the Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is zh ò ur ì s ā NJI ē, which means to meet three times a day. It describes being deeply loved and treated. From Yi Jin.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of changes, Jin states: "the Marquis of Kang used tin horses to help the common people, and the day was three." Kong yingdashu said: "those who meet in the daytime do not only receive a lot of gifts, but also are favored by their relatives. In the daytime, they are interviewed three times."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. Examples pick pen and word, when the feast to teach Jane, accompany the day. Gao Tang Meng by Wang Daokun in Ming Dynasty
receive favour from a superior
wake up as one from a drunken sleep - rú zuì fāng xǐng
A donkey's lips are not the same as a horse's - lǘ chún bù duì mǎ zuǐ
a book that is shut is but a block - kāi juàn yǒu yì
When enemies meet, they are especially open-minded - chóu rén xiāng jiàn ,fèn wài yǎn zhēng
dip one 's finger in the soup and have a taste - rǎn zhǐ yú dǐng