a matter of conscience
Sincere, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch é NGX ī NCH é ngy ì, describes very sincere. It comes from the biography of Ma Yuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Mao Zedong's "on the ten relations" 6: "we should actively help ethnic minorities to develop economic and cultural construction."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym]: true meaning [antonym]: hypocrisy [allegorical sayings]: Tao Gong Zu San rang Xuzhou; Liu Bei San asked Zhuge Liang
The origin of Idioms
"After the Han Dynasty · Ma Yuan biography" said: "open-minded, nothing hidden."
Idiom story
Granny Liu, a distant relative of the Jia family, saw that her daughter and son-in-law's life was very difficult, so she took her grandson ban'er to the Jia family to ask for help. She first went to see Zhou Rui's wife, the housekeeper of Jia family. Zhou Rui's wife guessed her intention and said, "don't worry, grandma. When Dayuan's sincerity comes, how can anyone not teach you to see a real Buddha? " So I took her to see Mrs. Wang and Wang Xifeng
Chinese PinYin : chéng xīn chéng yì
a matter of conscience
play up to people of power and influence. fù fèng pān lóng
his eyes are bigger than his belly. yǎn chán dù bǎo
An official knows his destiny. dá guān zhī mìng
Helping the poor and lending to the needy. zhèn pín dài fá
take bribes in order to turn a verdict in sb . 's favour. xùn sī wǎng fǎ