Respond with a crane
Minghezhiying, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m í NGH è zh ī y ī ng, which means that sincere hearts correspond with each other. It comes from Yi Zhongfu.
The origin of Idioms
Zhongfu in the book of changes: "the sound of crane is in Yin, and its son is in harmony with it." Wang Bi's note: "to be sincere and sincere, though it is in obscurity, things should also be like this." Kong yingdashu: "when you are in obscurity, if you don't break your promise, you will hear from others and be what the same kind should do."
Word usage
As an object; in writing
Examples
It's a well-known man living in a cave. When a doctor visits him, he feels that he should be a crane. He is Yong and Qiang. The husband also goes the ancient way. Preface to Yulin Qingshang poems by Zhang Juzheng in Ming Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : míng hè zhī yīng
Respond with a crane
great literature and classical works. gāo wén diǎn cè
stand head and shoulders above others. hè chǔ jī qún