be completely convinced
Nagong is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is n à g à ngch à ngch é n, which means to call oneself a subordinate. Later, it was also used as a metaphor to describe being obedient and willing to bow down. It comes from the marriage story of awakening the world.
Idiom explanation
He paid tribute and claimed to be a subordinate. Later, it was also used as a metaphor to describe a person who is willing to accept and bow to the downwind.
The origin of Idioms
In the 48th chapter of the marriage story of awakening the world, which was written in the Western Zhou Dynasty of the Qing Dynasty: "although Chen Liu sold a lot of private salt, who knows that this long used salt apprentice formed a group with this salt patrolling civilian Zhuang, and they all took tribute to that patrolling soldier in all seasons, so they let the salt apprentice run around and obstruct the salt method." According to the book of Emperor Taizong in the draft of the history of the Qing Dynasty, "it is appropriate for them to accept tribute and become ministers, and take the Yellow River as the boundary."
Chinese PinYin : nà gòng chēng chén
be completely convinced
stand firmly and fight steadily. wěn zhā wěn dǎ
have no contact with each other. shuǐ mǐ wú gàn
the integrity in one 's later years is not protected. wǎn jíe bù bǎo
hire personnel on the basis of their abilities. liàng cái lù yòng