Public talent and public expectation
Gongcai Gongwang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g à NGC á Ig à NGW à ng, which means that talent and fame can be called Gongfu status. It's from the new sayings of the world, pinzao, written by Liu Yiqing of the Southern Song Dynasty.
Idiom usage
The name refers to Gu Shu jin'ou.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Liu Yiqing's "new sayings of the world · pinzao": "Kong Yu has public talent but no public hope; Ding Tan has public hope but no public talent, and both of them are in Qing?"
Idiom explanation
Talent: talent; fame: fame. Talent, knowledge and fame can be called public and auxiliary status.
Idiom story
In the Southern Dynasties, when Wang Min was a child, his father worked as a Taiwei in the state of Qi. Taiwei was equivalent to Sangong and prime minister. Once, when the Wang family was having a banquet, the guests met Wang Min and said to his father, "public talent and public hope are seen in this child again." Later, Wang Min became a senior official when he was an adult.
Chinese PinYin : gōng cái gōng wàng
Public talent and public expectation
a student 's long years of academic studies. shí zǎi hán chuāng
There is no righteous war in the spring and Autumn period. chūn qiū wú yì zhàn
Clean up the dirt and seek the flaws. xǐ gòu qiú xiá
giant earthquakes and landslides. tiān bēng dì tān
there is not the slightest error. háo lí bù shuǎng
like a fishbone getting stuck in the throat -- necessary to give vent to one 's pent-up feelings. rú gěng zài hóu
swift as the wind and quick as lightning. diàn chè xīng chí