Set down the capital to support the dangerous
Ding Qing Fu Wei, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ì ngq ī NGF ú w ē I, which means to save the country from crisis. From "on salt and iron · Beihu".
The idiom comes from Han hengkuan's "on salt and iron · preparing for Hu": "in ancient times, the king of the Ming Dynasty wanted to fight against violence and defend the weak, to help the weak, and to please the monarch of a small country; if he wanted to fight against violence and incline, the innocent would be attached."
Chinese PinYin : dìng qīng fú wēi
Set down the capital to support the dangerous
Anger comes from the heart, and evil comes from the gallbladder. nù cóng xīn shàng qǐ,è xiàng dǎn biān shēng
Dangerous words are harsh to the ear. wēi yán nì ěr