in good faith
Ji Bu Yi Nuo, a Chinese idiom, is pronounced J ì B ù y í nuॸ, which means that he has great credit and does not break his word. It comes from the biography of Shiji jibluanbuli.
Analysis of Idioms
A promise of gold
Idiom usage
Xi Nie's government made a speech and broke his face to self-determination, while Ji Bu's government made a promise and remained unchanged. Lu Cai's the story of the Pearl
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian's biography of Ji Bu Luan Bu in historical records in the Western Han Dynasty: "if you get 100 Jin of gold, you'd better get Ji Bu Yi Nuo."
Idiom story
At the end of Qin Dynasty and the beginning of Han Dynasty, Ji Bu, a native of Chu, was a great general of Xiang Yu in the war between Chu and Han Dynasty. Later, he became the Grand Prince of Hedong after he was subordinated to Liu Bang, the emperor of the Western Han Dynasty. He was very trustworthy all his life. He would do what he promised, and never broke his promise. He is famous for his chivalry and abides by his promise. Therefore, people often say, "it's better to get a hundred jin of gold than to get a kibuyino."
Chinese PinYin : jì bù yī nuò
in good faith
feel like old friends at the first meeting. yī miàn rú jiù