Idioms describing delicious food are: mouth watering, eight treasures and jade food, five flavors, mouth watering, shame and delicacy.
I'm drooling
1. Pinyin: chuí xiá n yù d?
2. Definition: It means that I'm so greedy that my mouth is dripping, which describes me as being very greedy.
3. Source: Tang Zongyuan's "Zhao Hai Jia Wen": drooling and squandering the afternoon. I am so greedy that my mouth is dripping, and I spend money everywhere. )
Second, eight treasures and jade food
1. Pinyin: bā zhēn yù shí
2. Definition: delicacies refer to exquisite food.
3. Origin: Jin Dong Jieyuan's "The Romance of the West Chamber": Eight Treasures and Jade Foods invite Lang to eat, and a thousand words are good for business. I invite you to the banquet with delicious food, and there are thousands of words I want to tell you. )
Three or five flavors are all available
1. Pinyin: wǔ wèi jù quán
2. Definition: It describes that the seasoning is sweet, sour, bitter, spicy and salty.
3. Origin: The Book of Rites and Liyun by Dai Sheng in the pre-Qin period: five flavors, six flavors and twelve foods. Different foods eaten in twelve months of the year are all sweet, sour, spicy and salty. )
Fourth, mouth watering
1. Pinyin: chuí xián sān chǐ
2. Interpretation: refers to the mouth with three feet of saliva, which describes the mouth as greedy to the extreme. Also describe envy to the extreme, very want to take it for yourself.
3. Source: Tang Zongyuan's Three Commandments: Introduction, dogs covet, and their tails are all coming. Entering the room, a group of dogs with three feet of saliva hanging from their mouths all wrapped their tails up. )
5. Delicious
1. Pinyin: zhēn xiū měi wèi
2. Definition: It refers to very precious and delicious food.
3. Source: Ming Lanling Xiaoxiaosheng's "Jin Ping Mei Ci Hua": put it on the table, but there is no dragon liver and phoenix marrow. There are very precious and delicious foods, but there is no dragon liver and phoenix marrow. )