be kind and generous
Magnanimous, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ku à NH ó NGD à Li à ng, describes a person who is big in measure, broad-minded and tolerant. Treat people and things with a broad mind. It comes from Yu Qiao Ji by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's a predicate, an attribute and an adverbial; it's commendatory. 1. Lu Xun's "hesitation and blessing": "fortunately, my family has always been magnanimous and refused to care with villains." 2. Lust and wealth: it's best not to be drunk when drinking, not to be confused when meeting lust, not to be greedy for ill gotten gains, and to be magnanimous. (3) Chapter 25 of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty "three things about saving the white horse in tuntu mountain" and Cao Cao's solution to the siege: the prime minister is magnanimous, what can not be tolerated. I'd like to hear three things.
Analysis of Idioms
Open minded and magnanimous
The origin of Idioms
The third part of the story of Yu Qiao written by Wu Mingshi in Yuan Dynasty: "I don't know how much my husband beat me. Yuan (originally) came to be generous."
Chinese PinYin : kuān hóng dà liàng
be kind and generous
sharp eyes and agile hands or nimble fingers. yǎn jiān shǒu kuài
the bright younger generation. hòu jìn zhī xiù
plunge the people into misery and suffering. shēng líng tú tàn