Benevolence and righteousness
Hanren Huaiyi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h á NR é nhu á iy ì, meaning benevolence and righteousness. It comes from Liu Xiang's Shuo yuan Bian Wu of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xiang of the Han Dynasty wrote in Shuo yuan · Bian Wu: "so Qilin bunting has a head and a tail, and a corner of the dome, which means benevolence and righteousness."
Idiom usage
The benevolent beast in Yi's horn is endowed with the quintessence of the five elements. It must be benevolent and righteous, and travel instead of living in groups. Lin Fu by Wu Shu of Song Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : hán rén huái yì
Benevolence and righteousness
Finish his work in one battle. bì qí gōng yú yī yì
Beating the ground out of one's stomach. gǔ fù jī rǎng
The branch is bigger than the root. zhī dà yù běn
rich content within a small compass. chǐ fú qiān lǐ