The month before last
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z à nqi á NYU è Xi à, which means before the wine bottle, under the moon, refers to the leisurely situation of enjoying the moon with wine. It comes from Gong Zizhen's eight books with Wu Hongsheng in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
To drink freely under the moon
The origin of Idioms
In Gong Zizhen's book eight with Wu Hongsheng in the Qing Dynasty, it is said that "my younger brother's festival is too vulgar and tedious, and he is not happy with the moon and wine. In the past and in the future, there is still the sound of pecking. If you want to defend against 100000 enemies, you must first refuse at home, but you have no luck to come and see the color. "
Idiom explanation
Before the bottle, under the moon. It refers to the leisurely situation of enjoying the moon with wine.
The month before last
strip off one 's upper garment and make an apology - ròu tǎn qiān yáng
run around here and there and busy oneself with worldly affairs - kǒng xí mò tū
fair as a flower and beautiful as the moon - yuè mào huā róng