To be humble
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā NCH ǔ Xi à Li ú, which means willing to be indecent. It refers to being backward. It comes from the notes of Youtai fairy house, Wuxi Yang's daughter, written by Yu Yue of Qing Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used in life
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: willing to be inferior, willing to be backward antonym: unwilling to lag behind
The origin of Idioms
"You are my official, I am my beggar, what's wrong with you? If you don't care about it, you're willing to be vulgar. You really have a different heart. "
Idiom explanation
Willing to be indecent. It is compared to being willing to stay behind.
Chinese PinYin : gān chǔ xià liú
To be humble
true gold does not fear fire. liè huǒ zhēn jīn