one's reputation is justified
It is a Chinese idiom.
Pinyin: m í ngxi à w ú x à
Explanation: the original meaning is that the famous person must have real talent and practical learning, and the later metaphor is worthy of the reputation.
idiom
one's reputation is justified
Pinyin
míngxiàwúxū
Citation explanation
The original meaning is that a well-known person must have real talent and learning. The post metaphor deserves its reputation. It means that those who are famous must have practical learning. The description is true to its name. In the biography of Yao Chazhuan in Chen Shu by Yao Silian of Tang Dynasty, "Liu Zhen of Pei state stole more than ten suspicious facts from the mansion to visit the book of Han, and for analysis, they are all well founded. Zhen said to his relatives: "there will be no empty scholar under his name." In Chen Shu · Yao Chazhuan: "Pei Guo Liu Zhen stole more than ten pieces of suspected facts from the residence to visit Han Shu, and for analysis, they all have evidence. Zhen said to his relatives: "there will be no empty scholar under his name." Chapter 52 of Jing Hua Yuan by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty. Chapter 88 of Jing Hua Yuan: "if you don't draft Guoneng's essay, you can write it immediately. That's the name of Wuxu." The first chapter of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: "I realized that they must be developed, and it's as expected: it shows that the article is valuable and the name is worthy."
usage
As predicate, object and attribute, metaphor is worthy of its name.
Chinese PinYin : míng xià wú xū
one's reputation is justified
ready to stand out for justice. jí gōng hào shī
one 's complexion is clear as jade. miàn rú guān yù
there are plenty of people who. dà yǒu rén zài