Name and character
CE Ming Wei Zhi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C è m í NGW ě izh ì, which means to devote oneself to the imperial court for official career. It comes from Zuo Zhuan, the 23rd year of Duke Fu.
The origin of Idioms
Zuo Zhuan, the 23rd year of the Duke of Fu, said, "the second is to create a new name." Du Yu noted: "the famous book is the policy of the subject." Kong yingdashu: "in ancient times, the officials wrote to the officials, and their names were in the policy, so they belonged to the Ming Dynasty."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it can be used as an official. In Yang Jiong's Xue Zhen Xing Zheng of Tang Dynasty and Zuo Zhuan's the 23rd year of Duke Fu, it is said that "the name and the quality are the key to the success." Du Yu notes: "the name of the book in the minister's strategy." Kong yingdashu: "in ancient times, officials wrote to their officials, and their names were based on policies, so that they belonged to Ming Dynasty." Later, it is used to refer to the affairs of devoting oneself to the imperial court because of being an official.
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: go away
Chinese PinYin : cè míng wěi zhì
Name and character
a mantis trying to stop a chariot. táng bì dāng chē
human effort is the decisive factor. shì zài rén wéi
withered tree suddenly blossoms. kū shù kāi huā
living a life of ease and leisure. yōu zāi yóu zāi