Ju an senior
Ju'an is a Chinese idiom, pronounced J ūāī NZ ī sh ē n, which means to describe the ease of learning and deep attainments. It's from Mencius, under the leaves.
Idioms and allusions
Mencius · lilouxia written by Mencius Ke in the pre Qin period: "Mencius said," a gentleman's way of further study is to be self satisfied. If you are complacent, you will live in peace; if you live in peace, you will have deep capital; if you have deep capital, you will choose the right and left according to the original. So a gentleman wants to be complacent. " Zhu Xi's annotation: "if you are satisfied with yourself, you will be secure and not waver. If you are secure, you will be far-reaching and endless." Later, it was said that the mastery of knowledge was firm and deep-rooted.
Discrimination of words
In Yuan Qinglin's postscript to Zhu Zi's final conclusion in his later years, it is said that "if there is no place to live in, you still think it is not auspicious to know, but not erudite to read." [emotional color] commendatory words [generation time] ancient times [degree of common use] rare [related idioms] highly respected, thinking of danger in times of peace, worrying about danger in times of peace, talking about seniority, taking advantage of the enemy, taking advantage of the enemy, one and a half class [antonyms] make up for the number
Chinese PinYin : jū ān zī shēn
Ju an senior
sit side by side and talk intimately. cù xī tán xīn
Thousands of rivers and mountains. qiān shuǐ wàn shān
be willing to spend ten million in finding good neighbors. qiān wàn mǎi lín
Against the public to the private. bèi gōng xiàng sī