Joke Collection Website - Talk about mood - I don't want to sleep if I don't want tea at night. What's the next sentence?

I don't want to sleep if I don't want tea at night. What's the next sentence?

Don't think about tea and rice, the next sentence can be, sleepless nights, water and rice, Lacrimosa and so on.

Don't think about tea, don't think about rice is an idiom in China, pronounced as chá bú sī and fà n bú xi m: ng, which means to describe inner anxiety and distress.

Pinyin: chá bú sī: and fà n bú xi: ng

Short spell: cbsfbx

Explanation: Describe the inner anxiety and distress. See [tea and rice are unintentional].

Autumn is cool and September is dry. It is a letter written to Su Wu by Li Ling, a strategist, poet and writer in the Western Han Dynasty. In the sixth year of the Yuan Dynasty (8 1 BC).

Original paragraph: Autumn is crisp in September, and the grass outside the Great Wall declines. I can't sleep at night, give ear and listen far away, Hu Jia interacts, herding horses whine, whistling in groups, and sounds are everywhere. Sitting and listening in the morning, I feel no tears. Well, I don't care about purple. What is Ling Du's heart? How can I not be sad!

Vernacular translation: In late autumn and September, the vegetation outside the Great Wall withered, and I couldn't sleep at night. Listen attentively, the rustle comes and goes, and the horses whine. Music and hiss mingle and surround the Great Wall. Sitting up in the morning listening to these voices, I shed tears unconsciously. Alas, Ziqing, am I hard-hearted, can I not be sad?