Liangjia shenzang
Liangjia shencang, a Chinese idiom, is Li á NGG ǔ sh ē NC á ng in pinyin, which means that people who can do business collect valuable things deeply and don't let you find out the details. It means that people with real knowledge don't show them in front of others. It also means "Liangjia shencang Ruo Xu". It's from the book of rites of Dadai · Zengzi Zhiyan.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites of Dadai · Zengzi Zhiyan, it is said that "if a good man is deeply hidden, it is as if he is empty. If a gentleman has a strong education, it is as if he does not have one."
Idiom usage
Example: xuanguqian said that there is nothing that can be done, and the eldest grandmother thinks it is Liangjia shenzang. In the thirty second chapter of Xia Jingqu's Ye sou Pao Yan in Qing Dynasty and the biography of Laozi Han Fei in historical records, it is said that "a good man is as deep as a void, a gentleman is as virtuous, and his appearance is as stupid. It's not good for a son to get rid of his arrogance and lust, his appearance and lust, and his lust. "
Chinese PinYin : liáng jiǎ shēn cáng
Liangjia shenzang
highly meritorious and respectable. gōng gāo wàng zhòng
pop one 's head in and look about. tàn tóu tàn nǎo
wooden statues or plaster idols. ní sù mù diāo