Huang you
Huang you is a Chinese idiom, and its pinyin is f ǔ f ú Hu á ngy ó U. It means to assist the court. From Huainanzi shuolinxun
Idiom explanation
You said to assist the imperial court
Idiom usage
An example is the preface of Meng panlin in Yuan Dynasty: "Fu Huang you, the government of longitude and latitude, changed from fighting to fighting, changed from clothes to clothes." Ming Fengji · paying homage to Zhongling, written by Wu Mingshi of Ming Dynasty, said: "Fu Huangyou succeeded the former king in governing the country; the article was polished to make progress." "Pingshan Lengyan" for the first time: "begging for the Royal rites meeting, sending envoys to the world to search for the help of Huang you." According to Luo Yachen's tomb list of Yuan Yatang (the seventh grandson of Yuan Keli), a scholar in the Qing Dynasty, "the Great Wall is a place of tranquility. It's really able to defend the Central Plains, and it's the place where you are the emperor."
Chinese PinYin : fǔ fú huáng yóu
Huang you
fabricate rumours to mislead people. liú yán huò zhòng
behead enemy generals and capture their flags. zhǎn jiàng qiān qí
great ambition but little talent. cái shū zhì dà