be firm and secure
An'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an'an. It's from the makeup box.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Yuan Wu Mingshi's "Baozhuang makeup box" is: "the little prince is also safe and steady guarding the makeup box as a talisman, while Chen Lin is holding a big Muggle in her arms
Idiom usage
Combined; used as attributive and adverbial; with commendatory meaning. In Chapter 16 of Wu Jingzi's unofficial history of the scholars in the Qing Dynasty, the dutiful son of daliuzhuang is a relative of the virtuous priest of Yueqing County: he got himself in the middle, knelt down on his knees and held Taigong's legs on his shoulders. Let Taigong sleep peacefully, chapter 29 of scholars: "the monk is so anxious that he is sitting peacefully in his room." Chapter 33 of Li Baojia's the appearance of officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: now I've got this Ming Bao out of thin air. I don't want to live a safe life. I'm sent to the Department to introduce myself. I think it's my destiny. I've committed a "post horse star" in LiuNian this year, so I'm going to go this far. Chapter 24 of a brief history of civilization: "in general, we are waiting for the appointment to be made, but we can't see the difference." Lu Yao's ordinary world, Vol.1, Chapter 19: "she will still worry about her work as she did in the past."
Chinese PinYin : ān ān wěn wěn
be firm and secure
let one 's personal interest affect the whole. yǐ sī hài gōng
Hidden scale and hidden color. yǐn lín cáng cǎi
a person of exceptional ability or striking appearance. rén cái chū zhòng