Kengou KENTANG
Kengou KENTANG is a Chinese idiom, which comes from Shangshu Dagao: "to be a family name is to govern.". The father has already given the Dharma, but the son is not willing to be the foundation of the hall, and is he willing to build the main house? " The original intention is that the son even refuses to build the foundation of the house, so he is willing to build a house. Later, it was used to repair a house. It was used to refer to the son inheriting his father's business.
Kengou KENTANG
Shiyitang: the foundation of the hall; structure: building houses.
In Ming Dynasty, there was a strict king and a virtuous son. ~, it is famous in later generations. (the seventh chapter of Zui Xing Shi by Dong Lu Gu kuansheng in Ming Dynasty)
Chinese PinYin : kěn gòu kěn táng
Kengou KENTANG
one 's mind is burning with grief. chóu cháng jiǔ zhuǎn
the sea and sky are boundless. hǎi kuò tiān gāo