There is no match for kindness
Cimingwushuang is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is C í m í NGW ú Shu ā ng, which means to praise the most prestigious brother or peer.
The origin of Idioms
Shuang word CI Ming, a fan. He was young and eager to learn. He was twelve years old and was able to understand the spring and Autumn Annals and the Analects of Confucius. Yingchuan said: "Xun's eight dragons are incomparable." Fan Ye's biography of Xun Shuang in the later Han Dynasty
Idiom story
During the Han Dynasty, Xun Shuang, with CI Ming as his character, was particularly fond of learning since he was a child. When he was 12 years old, he could master the spring and Autumn Annals and the Analects of Confucius. Du Qiao, the Taiwei, admired him very much and praised him for being a teacher of others. He could understand the subtleties of Scripture, which none of his seven brothers could. Therefore, others say that he "Xun's eight dragons are unparalleled in benevolence."
Idiom usage
As predicate, complement, attribute; used in praise of people example Qingyun's fast person is also young and studious, merciful and unparalleled. Preface to sun Zhiwei's poem to Wang Zhouci in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Words with the same rhyme: startling Yuanyang by beating duck, bewitching the country, sharing the spoils by sitting on the ground, drinking the horse and the Yangtze River, hurting the eldest, for the first time, being brave and knowing, being sharp and undeserved, hiding the glory, snow and firefly window
Chinese PinYin : cí míng wú shuāng
There is no match for kindness
be able to attain the goal according to schedule. jì rì yǐ dài
one 's eyes flashed like lightning. mù guāng jiǒng jiǒng
The day is warm and the wind is warm. rì hé fēng nuǎn
high position and handsome salary. gāo guān hòu lù
the counsellors are very many. móu fū kǒng duō