High rank and high salary
Gaojuchonglu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā oju é zh ò NGL ù, which means high rank and high salary. From the romance of Sui and Tang Dynasties.
Notes on Idioms
Title: title, rank; salary: salary.
The origin of Idioms
Chu people in the Qing Dynasty won the first time in the romance of the Sui and Tang Dynasties: "you officials, you say that the expedition is a career of one sword and one shot, and the victory is not divided. The king of Jin is the prince of Sui. He has a high rank and heavy salary. He is not comfortable, but he wants to do it?"
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; used for status, treatment, etc. "From Hao Zhi to song Shou Yue, they were all Xun and loyal. They were famous generals of the time. He was born in Chengping of the world, with few policemen in the border areas. He supported the festival, established the Imperial Palace, was high in rank and high in salary, and ended up in the examination of longevity Wang Anshi, Song Dynasty, wrote in the fourth Zhazi: "a man and a minister are competent in intelligence, so he is worthy of high rank and high salary."
Chinese PinYin : gāo jué zhòng lù
High rank and high salary
recover one 's original simplicity ; return to one 's original nature. fǎn pǔ guī zhēn