be grateful for
Gratitude, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ǎ n ē nd à ID é, which means to appreciate the kindness and benefits of others. It comes from the biography of Luo Tong in Wu Zhi of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
In the chronicles of the Three Kingdoms, Wu Zhi, biography of Luo Tong, Volume 57: "Tong often advised Sun Quan to accept scholars with respect for their merits and seek profits and losses diligently Today, we are all grateful to Dai Yi and have the heart to repay. What's the use of power? "
Idiom usage
As predicate and attribute. The third chapter of "Eastern European heroines" written by Lady Lingnan in Qing Dynasty: "once in a while, a crafty thief came out and touched him with a little favor. He was very happy and grateful." Su Tianjue of the Yuan Dynasty wrote "Zhao wenzhenggong, the Privy Minister of the Yuan Dynasty" that "now I hear that his father is dead, and I sincerely establish him as king, and send him back to the country. My son will be grateful and willing to cultivate his official position."
Chinese PinYin : gǎn ēn dài dé
be grateful for
He who sees good will change. jiàn shàn bì qiān
have quick wits in an emergency. rén jí zhì shēng
Diseased people poison the country. bìng mín gǔ guó
a thousand deaths will not atone for one 's crime. zuì bù shèng zhū
The gummy teeth and the tongue. yín chǐ dàn shé