Sharpen
Honing is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is m ó L ó NGD ǐ L ì, which means four kinds of grindstones with different texture and color. Honing exercise is also called "honing the bottom", and "honing the bottom". From Shangshu Jianwu Wang.
The origin of Idioms
Mei Cheng of Han Dynasty wrote a letter to admonish the king of Wu: "according to the fact that it was not born, it was not shaped first, and it was not damaged after being tempered."
Idiom usage
It refers to repeated training. Examples: living in peace with friends, giving lectures, and honing all have their own values, which are beyond other countries. In Qing Dynasty, Dai Mingshi's preface to Zheng Yunshi's Yizhi and in contemporary times, Yin Qian's complete works of Yin Qian's Essays: with the tempering of the stone, you will increase your strength to overcome the bitter wind and rain, cold frost and ice, to create your value and make your life brilliant. Tribulations make the strong know the real life, and the real life needs tribulations, because they know that life without tribulations is a blank life. Because of its coldness and cruelty, tribulation sublimates the fate of the strong and makes them more intelligent, profound, colorful, graceful, beautiful and fruitful.
Chinese PinYin : mó lóng dǐ lì
Sharpen
Managing the great cause of the country. jīng guó dà yè