bear in mind always
This is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Ni à NZ à Z à iz à, which generally refers to remembering something. It comes from Shangshu dayumo.
explain
Read: miss; Z: this, this. It is generally used to refer to a thing that you never forget.
source
The book of history dayumo: "the emperor read it! It's time to read and it's time to interpret. As the saying goes, "this is where we are. If we allow this to be, only the emperor can do something." The interpretation is that the emperor should miss him, the one who reads virtue is gaotao, the one who likes virtue is gaotao, the one who publicizes virtue is gaotao, and the one who sincerely promotes virtue is gaotao. The emperor will deeply remember his achievements
Examples
Both of them and F are in the middle of the dust and beside the broken paper. (Lu Xun's just collection on the so-called "Da Nei archives") and Shangshu Da Yumo: "the emperor read it! It's time to read and it's time to interpret. As the saying goes, "this is where we are. If we allow this to be, only the emperor can do something." Kong Zhuan: "this is to be interpreted and abandoned. It's the merit of Nianzi people; it's the sin of abolishing them. Don't frame your words. " The poem "Mingzi" written by Tao Qian of Jin Dynasty: "Wen Gong, day and night, read this poem."
Chinese PinYin : niàn zī zài zī
bear in mind always
drift about without any definite trace like running water or duckweed. làng jì píng zōng
get the opposite of what one wants. shì yù xīn wéi
city of strong fortification. shí chéng tāng chí
have talent but no opportunity to use it. lóng pán fèng yì