This noun phrase is translated as: Spring outing.
The verb phrase is translated as: spring outing.
Extended data:
Go for an outing, also called spring outing, spring outing, etc. China's custom of going for an outing has a long history. Legend has it that it was formed as early as the pre-Qin period, and it was also said that it began in the Wei and Jin Dynasties. According to the Book of Jin, every spring, people go to the suburbs to enjoy the scenery together, especially in the Tang and Song Dynasties. Du Fu, a poet in the Tang Dynasty, once recorded the grand occasion of the royal spring outing: "On March 3, the world is new, and many beautiful women enjoy the cool in Chang 'an seaside." For thousands of years, outing has gradually become a ceremony, as if only by doing this ceremony can we really have spring. "I don't play in spring, but I am afraid I am an idiot." Bai Juyi's poem You Chun is a portrayal of this mentality.
Going for an outing is a kind of relaxation, which can best arouse the return of childlike innocence. In winter, the activity space is narrow, and the mind is like a tightly wrapped cocoon, which is difficult to stretch. When spring returns to the earth, everything wakes up, "stealing for half a day", unloading all worldly affairs, taking family or friends to the suburbs to find traces of spring, blending in with nature, watching blue sky and white clouds, flowers and plants, listening to swallows whispering, bathing in spring, strolling through country roads, picking a willow leaf at will, putting it to your lips and blowing out a happy song. Happy, you might as well take off your shoes, step on the dirt barefoot and shout at the sky; Tired, turn over and lie down on the spot. Not only pleasing to the eye, but also opening people's minds.