refined and courteous
Polite, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B ī Nb ī NY ǒ UL ǐ. Binbin: it has both literary grace and simple appearance, which is later used to describe elegance.
A moral term used to express one's personal accomplishment and style. It is used to describe an elegant and polite appearance. It comes from the preface of Taishigong in Shiji.
From the Analects of Confucius, Confucius said: "quality is better than literature, and literature is better than history. Gentle, then gentleman.
Idiom usage
It is very polite to describe people. Chapter 83 of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: "call out his two sons, elder brother first and younger brother later." Cai Dongfan wrote for the first time in the romance of the Qing Dynasty: "the old man intends to get married on a certain day, and bukuli Yongshun lives here. In his spare time, he went to all the villages to inquire. When the villagers saw that he was polite, they all welcomed him. " Chapter one of Zou Taofen's the rest of his life in need: "when Chen heard the newspaper, he went to the car to greet him. He was wearing a grey blue silk shirt, but he looked like a rich gentleman from the countryside.
Analysis of Idioms
He is gentle, generous and gentle. antonym unreasonable, rude, unreasonable, unruly, unruly and rude. Xiehouyu: new daughter-in-law pays new year's greetings; seven aunts and eight uncles carry food boxes. lantern riddle gifts from Er Shan.
Chinese PinYin : bīn bīn yǒu lǐ
refined and courteous
Sit on the fishing boat in spite of the storm. rèn píng fēng làng qǐ,wěn zuò diào yú chuán