broad-minded
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m í ngyu è R ù Hu á I, which means that people are open-minded. From the poem Dai Huai Wang.
Analysis of Idioms
The sun and the moon
The origin of Idioms
The poem "Dai Huai Wang" written by Bao Zhao in Song Dynasty of Southern Dynasty: "Zhucheng has nine gates and nine boudoirs. I'd like to enter your arms by the bright moon."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate type; as object and attribute; with commendatory meaning, it refers to a cheerful mind. Xiangting was accompanied by Liu Taishou in Xuzhou. Everyone who saw him had the feeling that the breeze was blowing. Yuan Mei's "xiaocangshanfang's letters" in the Qing Dynasty and Wen Tingyun's poem "drunken song" in the Tang Dynasty: "I laugh first when the wind blows around, and you know when the moon is in your mind. 」
Chinese PinYin : míng yuè rù huái
broad-minded
Drown oneself and starve oneself. jǐ nì jǐ jī
have both ability and political integrity. dé cái jiān bèi