large-minded
Benevolence, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ku ā NR é nd à D à, meaning generous, open-minded. It comes from the biography of Jingzhen in ZhouShu.
Idiom explanation
Magnanimous: generous and tolerant. He is generous and open-minded.
Idioms and allusions
Ling Hu de Fen's biography of Jingzhen in the book of Zhou in the Tang Dynasty: Zhen said: Prime Minister Yuwen has been lenient and magnanimous, and has the strategy of overlord. It has been several years since he took the emperor and ordered the princes. Although there are many people who are happy, they are not their spouses. If we go against the principle, we will collapse without fighting. If I summon volunteers, cut off their return, and annihilate the murderers, it will not be the shame of the imperial court, but also the career of a strong man as a marquis.
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: magnanimous, open-minded, magnanimous, the prime minister can pull a boat. Antonyms: small bellied, narrow-minded, rat bellied.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu, Han Dynasty, wrote in the book of the Han Dynasty, Gao Di Ji: "benevolence and love, like giving, meaning as well, often magnanimous, not family production operations."
Idiom usage
It refers to a person with great capacity.
Chinese PinYin : kuān rén dà dù
large-minded
life is intermingled with joy and sorrow. lí hé bēi huān