Holding the throne
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù h é NGJ ù D ǐ ng, which means to be in a high position and shoulder heavy responsibilities. It comes from Cheng Qi, Wenxindiaolong.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Liang and Liu Xie's "Wen Xin Diao Long · Cheng Qi", it is said that "Kong Guang's humble position is inferior to that of Pan Yue." Zhou Zhenfu's note: "to hold the tripod in the negative balance means to be in the prime phase.". Balance, scale, table flat; tripod, three feet, Yu Sangong
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attributive; used of a person's position
Chinese PinYin : fù héng jù dǐng
Holding the throne
travel through all the kingdoms. zhōu yuó liè guó
Don't read monk's face, read Buddha's face. bù niàn sēng miàn niàn fó miàn
harmonious relation among emperor and his ministers. shèng jīng xián xiàng