嬉戏 | xī xì | to frolic; to romp | |
嬉笑 | xī xiào | to be laughing and playing; to giggle | |
嬉笑怒骂 | xī xiào nù mà | lit. laughs, jeers, anger and invective (idiom); fig. all kinds of emotions; to mock and scold; (of writing) freely roving; following the author's fancy | |
嬉皮士 | xī pí shì | hippie (loanword) | |
嬉游 | xī yóu | to amuse oneself; to have fun |
1 | They think I'm a bit of a hippie. | |
2 | They were dressed up in hippie clothing. | |
3 | I told him how Mom had brought me up on her own at the start of the Hippie Era. | |
4 | We watch for hawks in the sky and deer in the cornfields. | |
5 | A hippie fan brought him to California for a visit in 1975, and his fame spread. |