Common sense
Common sense, Chinese words, Pinyin is ch á NGL ǐ, meaning the general law; common sense.
explain
1. The general law. 2. Common principles.
source
Tao Qian of Jin Dynasty wrote the poem "the shape gives the shadow", which says: "the plants have common sense, and the frost and dew are gaunt." Ouyang Xiu of Song Dynasty wrote that "all things have common sense, but they can't be inferred, and the sage can't speak." According to the third chapter of Renbu in wuzazu written by Xie Zhaohe in Ming Dynasty, "a man is two Zhang old, so he can't always be a theorist." "This is an extraordinary thing, which should not be judged by common sense." In the fifth chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty, Ning Yi said: "it is common sense in ancient times that the father died and the son succeeded. Although Mu Gong had the heart of Yao and Shun, Feng mu, the son of Nai, hated losing his position and lived in a neighboring country. His heart never forgot Song Dynasty. " Sun Yat Sen's the revolutionary army is to break the inequality: "the revolutionary army is to use one person to fight 100 people. Such a battle is a very special battle, and it can't always be theorized." In the fourth chapter of Water Margin by Shi Naian in Ming Dynasty, Lu Zhishen made a big noise in Wutai Mountain, and Zhao Yuanwai rebuilt Manjusri Temple: one is not to kill, two is not to steal, three is not to commit adultery, four is not to drink, five is not to talk nonsense.
Chinese PinYin : Chang Li
Common sense