to be said of greatness of maternal love
Cuncao Chunhui, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ù NC ǎ och ū nhu ī, which means that the meager mind of grass can't repay the deep love of spring sunshine, and it means that the kindness of parents is heavy and hard to repay. It's from a wanderer's song.
Notes on Idioms
Inch grass: grass; Chunhui: sunshine in spring.
The origin of Idioms
Meng Jiao of the Tang Dynasty wrote a poem called "you Zi Yin": who said that the heart of the inch grass would be rewarded with the sunshine of the spring. "
Idiom usage
It is a metaphor for the gratitude of parents. example Ming · he Jingming's poem "passing through the tomb of our ancestors to show Peng tianzhang": "this body is like the spring sunshine of an inch of grass, how can we answer the spring sunshine of an inch of grass. Every inch of grass has no root, so it's useless to teach Dangui to spit out Qifen. In Qing Dynasty, Fang Chengpei's Lei Feng pagoda
Chinese PinYin : cùn cǎo chūn huī
to be said of greatness of maternal love
seclude and avoid worldly care. gāo jǔ yuǎn dǎo
Exchange wine for golden mink. jīn diāo huàn jiǔ