Simple and sincere
Plain and sincere, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is p ǔ n è ch é NGD ǔ, describing people as simple and honest, not good at words. It comes from Huifang, strange tales from a lonely studio.
The origin of Idioms
Pu Songling's strange tales from a lonely studio Huifang in the Qing Dynasty: "when a horse is born, his name is mixed and his career is profane. How can Huifang be taken? Here I see the value of immortals, simple and sincere. "
Idiom usage
To refer to as a person
Chinese PinYin : pǔ nè chéng dǔ
Simple and sincere
of impure bone and mortal flesh. zhuó gǔ fán tāi
magnificent in scale and grand in momentum. táng zāi huáng zāi
pull up enemy flags and behead enemy generals on the battle field. qiān qí qǔ jiàng