make liberal contributions
Generously losing a general, a Chinese idiom, means to donate money to help people without stinging. More for the society and the masses. It comes from the biography of Chao CuO in the book of Han by Ban Gu in the Eastern Han Dynasty.
essential information
The title of the poem is a generous speech
Source of allusion
Ban Gu's biography of Chao CuO in Hanshu of the Eastern Han Dynasty said, "Your Majesty is lucky to recruit the people to move to the frontier, so that the garrison will benefit the province, and the expense of the defeated generals will benefit little."
English translation
makegenerousdonations
Idiom information
Idiom explanation: donate money to help people without stint. More for the society and the masses. Example of idiom: Guo Moruo's "student days: a sequel to ten years of creation": "although the Chinese people were short of money, they were generous losers. At that time, Xueyi society did a lot of work." Idiom structure: partial formal generation time: ancient times
Chinese PinYin : kāng kǎi shū jiāng
make liberal contributions
Nothing can be done without effect. wú shī bù xiào
pour exhortations into sb . 's ear. ěr tí miàn mìng