sing and dance unduely
Zuiwuku á NGG ē, a Chinese idiom in pinyin, means to be addicted to music and dance. It's from the spring of jade house.
The origin of Idioms
The Song Dynasty Fan Chengda's poem "spring of the jade tower" said: "the road of the blue bridge fairy is not rugged, and drunken dancing and crazy songs can accommodate tired guests."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object; used in writing. My dream of prosperity has been broken. The fourth chapter of Lu zhailang by Guan Hanqing in Yuan Dynasty
sing and dance unduely
just miss the person or opportunity - shī zhī jiāo bì
Burning the amulet and breaking the seal - fén fú pò xǐ