A picture of a ball bear
Hua Di Wan Xiong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu à D í w á nxi ó ng, which means to praise the mother's ability to teach children. It comes from the general meaning of literature and history, ten evils of ancient prose.
The origin of Idioms
Zhang Xuecheng's "general meaning of literature and history · ten evils of ancient prose" in the Qing Dynasty: "why do you know the case of Lu Che Hong? Do all those who are good at teaching children remember huadihewan well
Idiom usage
It refers to praising the mother's ability to teach children.
Idiom story
In Song Dynasty, when Ouyang Xiu was young, his mother, Zheng's family, taught his son to study by painting land with silver grass. Liu Zhongying's mother Han used bear gall and meatballs to make her swallow at night to refresh her mind. When Ouyang Xiu, a litterateur of the Song Dynasty, was young, he could not go to school because his family was very poor. His mother used a reed pole to write and draw on the sand to teach him to read and read. In the Tang Dynasty, Liu Zhongying studied hard when he was young. His mother made balls from bear gall and let Liu Zhongying keep them in his mouth at night to refresh his mind. He studied hard and finally achieved something.
Chinese PinYin : huà dí wán xióng
A picture of a ball bear
history is full of such instances. shǐ bù jué shū
The army did not move, food and grass first. bīng mǎ wèi dòng, liáng cǎo xiān xíng
wine , women , avarice and pride -- the four cardinal vices. jiǔ sè cái qì
as beautiful and exquisite as the heavenly-woven brocade. tiān jī yún jǐn