a person of great ability and tremendous potential
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ò ngli á ngzh ī C á I, which means the wood that can be used as the main beam of a house. It means the talent who can undertake the important task of the country. It's from the new words of the world - appreciation.
Idiom explanation
Building: back purlin, main beam.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty wrote "Yu Zi, song Mu and Qiao are as dense as a thousand feet of pine. Although they have programs, they are used as pillars."
Idiom usage
Be an object; be a useful person. In the future, your cousins will be the pillars of our country. They will be able to come out of our two governments at the same time. There is no limit to their future! Chapter 16 of Duanmu Hongliang's Cao Xueqin in the past 42 years, there have been a number of "celebrities" and a number of pillars of the Republic's Radio and television industry. 3. To cultivate young people as pillars of modernization, we should guide them to fully understand their historical mission, set up their ambition, take rejuvenation of the Chinese nation as their own responsibility, and take learning knowledge, developing talents, and achieving greatness as their own goals, just like the excellent students of the second brigade of the Fourth Military Medical University; we should encourage them to "face modernization, the world, and the world" In the future, we should lay a solid foundation of scientific and cultural knowledge, dare to meet the challenges of the world's technological revolution, and bravely climb the summit of science and technology with the spirit of indomitable struggle; we should encourage them to take the road of combining with the people, go to the grass-roots units, go to places where the party and the people need it most, and enrich their knowledge, accumulate experience and increase their talents in social practice; We should guide them to become talents based on their posts, work, love and be dedicated to their profession, and be good at applying their intelligence to work practice, so as to create extraordinary achievements in ordinary jobs.
Idiom story
In the spring and Autumn period, Confucius's parents died, and he had to live with his half brother, Mencius. Mencius advised him to learn how to drive a carriage, while Confucius insisted on learning. He wanted to be a gentleman and a pillar of the country. He said, "a gentleman seeks Tao, not food." It was this kind of thought that forced him to neglect his talent and be excluded everywhere.
Chinese PinYin : dòng liáng zhī cái
a person of great ability and tremendous potential
Four bodies do not work hard, five grains do not divide. sì tǐ bù qín,wǔ gǔ bù fēn
between the sexes there should be a prudent reserve. nán nǚ yǒu bié
be prepared to meet the challenge. yán zhèn yǐ dài