the mellowness of natural condition and social customs of a place
Li á nqu á NR à ngshu à, a Chinese idiom, means that the original metaphor for honest officials, later also refers to the simple and beautiful customs. It comes from the biography of Hu Xie in southern history.
Idiom explanation
Honesty: honesty; let: humility.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Hu Xie in southern history, it is said that "the emperor Yanci and the greedy spring in Guangzhou asked Bainian:" is there such water in Qingzhou? " The answer is: "there are only Wenchuan, Wuxiang, Lianquan and Renshui in Liangzhou."
Idiom usage
It refers to the simple and honest people. Example: a clean spring gives way to water. Fortunately, it is cold and lonely, and the spirit of a weak one is weak. The mountain is hopeful, and the heart of a benevolent person is far away. Yu Pingbo's life is just like this: why raise money through the sea
Idiom story
During the northern and Southern Dynasties, fan Bainian, a native of Liangzhou, paid a visit to the emperor of song and Ming Dynasties and asked for the administration of the imperial court. During the conversation, they happened to talk about the greedy spring in Guangzhou. Emperor Song Ming asked fan Bainian if there was such a strange river in his hometown. Fan Bainian replied that there is no greedy spring in Liangzhou, only Wenchuan, Wuxiang, Lianquan and Renshui.
Chinese PinYin : lián quán ràng shuǐ
the mellowness of natural condition and social customs of a place
Watching and listening to the wind. guān huà tīng fēng
Curved eyebrows and plump cheeks. qǔ méi fēng jiá