high official positions and riches
Fame and fortune, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ō NGM í NGL ù, meaning fame and fortune. From Nanguan grass.
The origin of Idioms
The first act of Guo Moruo's nanguancao: "just because their fame and wealth are not guaranteed, they want to collude with the bandits and take risks."
Idiom usage
As subject, object, attribute; refers to fame and wealth. Niu Qidong didn't like Zhang Ju's study. He thought that it was a cover for corrupt scholars to disguise Taoism and a ladder for Philistines to seek fame and wealth, which had nothing to do with the national economy and the people's livelihood. Yao xueyin's Li Zicheng, Volume 1, Chapter 19
Chinese PinYin : gōng míng lì lù
high official positions and riches
There is no match for kindness. cí míng wú shuāng
every form of evil cannot be done. zhū è mò zuò