a peaceful and prosperous time
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin, is l ù B ù sh í y í, which means that no one picks up what others have lost on the road. It describes a good social atmosphere. It comes from Han Feizi, the top left of waichu.
Idiom explanation
Legacy: lost property.
The origin of Idioms
"There are no thieves in our country, but we can't find anything in it," says Han Feizi
Idiom usage
It is used as an object and attributive to describe the good social atmosphere. example staying at home at night, looking around, he is called a Western sage. The eleventh chapter of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin in Ming Dynasty and the biography of Kaitian by Zheng Yu in Tang Dynasty: "Ding Zhuang is a man who does not know weapons. If you don't find anything on the road, you don't need food. " Han Jiayi's new book, Xianxing: "the people are rich, the people are constant, the road is not found, the country has no prison lawsuit." Chapter 87 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms written by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: "the people of the two rivers are happy and peaceful. They never close their doors at night and never find anything left on the road. The first chapter of Water Margin written by Shi Naian in Ming Dynasty, Zhang Tianshi prayed for the plague and Hong Taiwei mistakenly walked away from the demon: from the reign of Kuhai in the year of Tiansheng yuan to the ninth year of Tiansheng, the world was peaceful, the grain was abundant, the people were happy, the roads were endless, and the houses were not closed at night.
Chinese PinYin : lù bù shí yí
a peaceful and prosperous time
Beaver to rat, ice to rope. yǐ lí zhì shǔ、yǐ bīng zhì shéng
Wash the marrow and cut the hair. xǐ suǐ fá máo
deep trenches and high ramparts. shēn gōu gāo lěi
have callosities on one 's hands and feet. shǒu zú pián zhī