place oneself in others ' position
In Chinese, Pinyin is sh è sh ē NCH ǔ D ì, which means to imagine yourself in someone else's situation. Standing in other people's situation and thinking for others. From the book of rites, the doctrine of the mean.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, the doctrine of the mean written by Zhu Xi of Song Dynasty, the body means to observe the heart in order to be in the place.
Idiom usage
It refers to standing in other people's situation and thinking for others. Sun Li's xiuluji GengTang reading notes (1): only when the creator touches the scene and the critic ~, can they complement each other. " if it's not a dream, what is ~? ——Li Yu of Qing Dynasty's "casual love" Volume 3 "Yu Qiu Xiao ru"
Chinese PinYin : shè shēn chǔ dì
place oneself in others ' position
confirmed habits are hard to get rid of. jī zhòng bù fǎn
the crumbs which fall from one 's master 's table. cán bēi lěng zhì
rise directly to a high position. fú yáo zhí shàng
a runaway horse gallops so fast that it leaves no trace. bēn yì jué chén
Absorb the new and explain the old. xī xīn tǔ gù