open one's heart to sb.
Open to each other, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k ā ICH é ngxi ā ngji à n, which means to treat people sincerely, showing sincerity. It comes from the biography of Ma Yuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Open heart: open heart, show sincerity.
The origin of Idioms
"Ma Yuan Zhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty:" he is open-minded and sincere, and has no hidden place. He is broad-minded and has many festivals, which is slightly the same as emperor Gao
Idiom usage
It has a derogatory meaning. examples representatives of the two sides met openly and reached an agreement on the cooperation between the two sides. Sun Yat Sen's "revolution will succeed in the end" says: "in the land of the revolutionary government, all kings should meet each other openly." Liu Yazi's "a poem about the patronage of Lin Laobo's canal": "Gao Mingqi, the old Yanjing, and Xu Wu, the five elders, thank Dong Lin. The state of the staff does not harm you. You have few teeth. I'm willing to meet you honestly. "
Chinese PinYin : kāi chéng xiāng jiàn
open one's heart to sb.
In the world of rivers and lakes, my heart hangs in Wei que. shēn zài jiāng hú,xīn xuán wèi què
as easy as burning hair and crushing dry weeds. liǎo fà cuī kū
when one drinks water , one must not forget where it comes from. yǐn shuǐ sī yuán
simple words but deep meaning. yán jìn zhǐ yuǎn
in at one ear and out the other. mǎ ěr chūn fēng