The grass is in vogue
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ǎ oy ǎ NF ē NGX í ng, which means to refer to the morally educated. It's the same as "the wind is spreading and the grass is withering". From Yan Yuan, Analects of Confucius.
Idioms and allusions
In the Analects of Confucius, Yan Yuan, Ji Kangzi asked Confucius, "if there is no way to kill, then there is a way. Why?" Confucius said to him, "how can you use killing to govern? The son wants to be good, but the people are good. The virtue of a gentleman, the virtue of a small man, and the wind on the grass will die down. "
Idiom usage
Example: Song Chen Liang's youguimao autumn book: "the secular world is becoming more and more shallow, and small measures have been enough to shake the whole life, so that secretaries can show what they have done, and today they can not be popular." In Jin Gehong's Bao Pu Zi · Yong Xing: "after Ming Dynasty, the wind was blowing in the grass and the road was harmonious and mellow." According to Bai Juyi of Tang Dynasty's "CE Uighur Khan Jiahao Wen", it is said that "the East spread to Haiyi, the West spread to Shandi, Huining and Weizhi, and the scale spread to Caoyan." In Zizhitongjian, the first year of Qinglong, Emperor Ming of Wei Dynasty: "Shenghua suosui, Wanli Caoyan." According to the biography of PANI in the book of Jin, "learning is like cultivating seedlings and turning into Thinopyrum."
Chinese PinYin : cǎo yǎn fēng xíng
The grass is in vogue
Follow the rules and practice the ink. dǎo jǔ jiàn mò
one 's behavior and conversation. jǔ zhǐ yán tán
ask after the people 's sufferings with deep concern. hán liǎo wèn jí
Yellow crested straw sandals. huáng guàn cǎo lǚ