Become one's own
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch é NGJ ǐ ch é NGW ù, which means to make achievements on one's own as well as everything else. It comes 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 Dai Sheng in the Western Han Dynasty, it is said that "a sincere person does not become himself, so he becomes a thing. To be a man is to be benevolent; to be a man is to know. The virtue of nature is the combination of internal and external ways.
Idiom usage
It means that we should have achievements in ourselves as well as others. Li Zhi's Chu Tan Ji Jun CHEN Si Neng Chen: "as soon as you enter the scene, you can play the piano, and you will be relieved if you don't have it, and you will be proud if you live.".
Chinese PinYin : chéng jǐ chéng wù
Become one's own
place a substitute by subterfuge. tōu tiān huàn rì
instructions from one 's father. guò tíng zhī xùn
rob the owner while his house is on fire. chèn huǒ dǎ jié
elevate one 's body and flying away. bái rì fēi shēng
look upon one with special respect. lìng yǎn kàn dài