Jingchen Yonghui
Jingchen Yonghui, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì ngz è NY ō nghu í, which means that the language is skillful but the action is disobedient, and the words are right and wrong. From Zuo Zhuan, the 18th year of Wengong.
Jing Yonghui (J ì ngz è NY ō nghu í) [explanation]: good language but bad behavior. What is right and what is wrong. It is the same as "Jingyan Yonghui". [source]: "in the 18th year of the Duke of Wen in Zuo Zhuan, it is said that" if you worship evil words, you will be quiet and mediocre. " Du Yu notes: "Jing, an ye; Yong, Yong ye; Hui, Xie Ye." [example]: ~, cut out no class. Han Qi Zhi, written by Zeng Gong of Song Dynasty, is used as predicate and object for fatuous leaders. Jingyan Yongwei
Chinese PinYin : jìng zèn yōng huí
Jingchen Yonghui
Gulls and rivers depend on each other. ōu shuǐ xiāng yī
stand vividly revealed on the paper. yuè rán zhǐ shàng
use the neighbour 's field as an outlet for one 's overflow. yǐ lín wéi hè
A kiss in the mouth produces flowers. kǒu wěn shēng huā
cutting into the present-day evils. qiè zhòng shí bì
Share happiness and difficulties together. yǒu fú tóng xiǎng,yǒu nàn tóng dāng