aged and greatly honoured for one 's virtues
Senior virtue, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ni á ng à OD é sh à o, which means old age and good virtue. From fayan Xiaozhi.
Idiom explanation
[idiom] Senior virtue [pronunciation] Ni á ng ā OD é sh à o [Pinyin]: Ni á ng ā OD é sh à o [explanation]: old, good virtue. Shao, also known as Shao and Shao, is noble and beautiful.
Idioms and allusions
[source] Han Yangxiong's "Fa Yan · Xiao Zhi": "I have heard all the biographies that" if you are old, you should get the precepts. "Those who are tall and virtuous are Confucius' disciples and disciples." Song and Qin Guan's Daihe lvsikongqi said, "when you are old and virtuous, your officials are more and more strict, and you have become famous and your emperor's family members are more and more prosperous." In the eighth chapter of Li Zhi in the draft of Qing Dynasty history: "laws and regulations, drinking in the countryside, ordering the elders and the young, discussing the virtuous and the virtuous, don't be treacherous and stubborn. Those who are old and venerable are on the list, and those who are pure and sincere are on their shoulders. " Lu Xun's "hesitation · ever burning lamp" said: "sitting on the first seat is Guo Laowa, who is young and has wrinkled her face like a dry orange."
Discrimination of words
[pinyin code]: ngde
Chinese PinYin : nián gāo dé ér
aged and greatly honoured for one 's virtues
take the matter on its merits. jiù shì lùn shì
which is right and which is wrong. shuí shì shuí fēi
think about by day and dream of by night. zhòu xiǎng yè mèng
half literary and half vernacular. bàn wén bàn bái