Fortune Telling Collection - Ziwei fortune-telling - Words describing delicious food

Words describing delicious food

Keep your mouth sweet

The saliva flowed down three feet from the lips.

Stare anxiously until your eyes are tired.

There is a sign of delicious food, and then it is described as delicious and greedy.

Yupan is delicious and delicious, and the feast is delicious. The phoenix marrow dragon liver has an endless aftertaste, with fragrant lips and teeth, good color and taste, and eight treasures and jade fragrance.

In everyone's mouth.

Words: smooth, tender and crisp, gravy overflowing, full in taste, long in aftertaste, soft and tender, and melted in the mouth.

As the saying goes: it takes two hands to make a sound.

Fragrant and fragrant

The fragrance drifted for miles.

Oily but not greasy

Crispy and delicious

Medium salinity and sweetness

Crisp and refreshing

Suitable seasoning

Sweet and sour

Fresh and juicy

Fresh and delicious

Fresh and refreshing

Spicy and delicious

Sweet and soft waxy

Delicious, delicious, delicious, sweet, refreshing, delicious, delicious, delicious, delicious, delicious, delicious, delicious, delicious, delicious, delicious.

A generous sacrifice

Meaning:

In the past, it was described as a rich sacrifice. Later, I also described the food as beautiful.

Word sound:

Sang sang w incarnation

Don't eat good rice or chopped meat-you are very picky about food.

Are you right?

Idiom allusion: disgust: satisfaction; Meat: finely cut meat. The finer the particles, the better the meat. Describe food that has been refined and carefully cooked.

The origin of the idiom: "The Analects of Confucius and the hard-working township party": "Zhai will change into food, and the residence will move." Fine food is not greasy, fine food is not greasy. "

For example, "Don't eat if you don't cut it right" is an old-fashioned rule of his old gentleman, but the rule of "eat carefully, eat carefully and not get tired" is a bit strange. (Lu Xun's "Southern accent, China women's feet ...")

Aili steamed food

I love you

Idiom allusion: Steamed pears to eat. Metaphor does not know the goods. Spoil good things in a muddle.

The origin of the idiom: Liu Yiqing in Shuo Wen Jie Zi New Things in the Southern Song Dynasty: "Every time people in Huannan County are unhappy, they say,' You should love the pears at home and stop steaming them?' "

Exquisite yaozhuan

Ban Zhuo Yong

Idiom allusion: refers to exquisite dishes.

An incompetent officer accustomed to irony.

Panchen (Lama)

Idiom allusion: eat with others. Used to satirize officials who do nothing and are incompetent.

The origin of the idiom: Biography of Lu Huaishen in the Old Tang Dynasty: "In the third year of Kaiyuan, I moved to Huangmen Prison. Huai Shen and Wei Zi brought Yao Chong very close. Huai Shen thinks that officials are not as good as worshipping, and everything is shirking. At that time, people called him the companion prime minister. "

eat to fullness and wear warm clothes

make extensive use of the expertise from all quarters

Idiom allusion: satiety: satiety; Warm clothes: Wear warm clothes. Describe a well-off life with ample food and clothing.

The origin of the idiom: "On Mencius Teng Wengong": "People have a way: to eat and wear warm clothes, to live in seclusion without teaching, that is, to get close to animals."

I'm full/overeated/full

Jiǔ· Pei su fen bo wo

Idiom allusion: the wine is exhausted and the food is full. Describe satiated with food and drink.

Idiom origin: Xiangyang Club in Gaoyuan Wen Xiu, the first discount: "I arranged a table of good wine here ... I am too drunk to walk."

Eat all day, don't use your head and do nothing.

Thousand sail boat races

Idiom allusion: all day: all day. Eat all day, don't think, don't do anything serious.

The origin of the idiom: "The Analects of Confucius Yang Huo": "It's hard to eat all day long without intention!"

For example, people who are full of food and have no intention are the least enterprising.

eat with relish

Swallow dates at dusk, eat well, and wear well.