Judge by yourself
Judging according to one's own characteristics, Chinese idioms, Pinyin is Li à NGJ à sh à NF è n, explanation is to evaluate oneself and examine one's own duty. It comes from the biography of Liu Yu, the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty, written by Liang and Xiao Zixian of the Southern Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Southern Dynasties, Liang and Xiao Zixian's biography of Liu Yu in the book of the Southern Qi Dynasty, it is said that "understanding is clumsy, people are idle, and they don't learn to advance in official positions Judge according to one's own judgment, and dare not expect glory. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : liàng jǐ shěn fēn
Judge by yourself
cherish an old broom as if it were a thousand pieces of gold. bì zhǒu qiān jīn
Tie the horse and bury the wheel. xì mǎ mái lún
exaggerate embellishment to a story. jiā yóu tiān cù