The woman who drinks alcohol (pinyin: chhunjiǔfürén) is an idiom, which comes from Sima Qian's Historical Records and Wei Gongzi in the Western Han Dynasty. Later generations derived the idiom "alcoholic woman" from this allusion.
Use the example of an alcoholic woman:
1, Qian Qing chanted "Walking in the Garden, Storing for the Past": "There are different people who end up with a woman who drinks."
In modern times, Zhang made a remark in "(China Monthly)": "If a teenager is wandering and thin, China has no owner, suffering from changes in the world, worrying and worrying, taking the ancient people's intention of eating, drinking and having fun in time, but interested in China, playing chess six times and drinking women's wine, thinking that if we can complete our life, our ambition will be particularly fragile."