Learn from the past
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d ǔ Xu é h à og ǔ, which means to concentrate on learning ancient books. It comes from the biography of Wu Zhi and Sun Yu in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
Idiom story
During the Three Kingdoms period, Sun Yu, Yang Taishou of dongwudan, especially liked to study ancient books and encouraged his children to read them. He had great respect for Ma Pu, a well-educated and knowledgeable man from Jiyin. He invited him to teach the children of the officials in the government and set up a school in Danyang and Lujiang counties. He often gave lectures himself, with hundreds of students.
Idiom usage
It is used in learning. [structure] combined example love runs through the classics and history, and is famous for its preface, but it is hard to learn from the past. The epitaph of CHEN Si Hu by Liu Ji of Ming Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Hand in hand to meet the martial arts, treat them like dirt, win without martial arts, be a great force, move the government, have no owners, not to mention a place, laugh and dance, touch the breasts of a lonely calf, and ride the snake and tiger
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Wu Zhi and Sun Yu in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, it is said that Ma Pu, a man of Jiyin, is devoted to studying the ancient, and is gracious
Chinese PinYin : dǔ xué hào gǔ
Learn from the past
show the feebleness of old age while still young. wàng qiū xiān líng
Basin facing the sky, bowl facing the ground. pén cháo tiān,wǎn cháo dì
seek far and neglect what lies close at hand. shě jìn wù yuǎn