happy and self-possessed are my noble quests
He dijunzi is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is k ǎ it ì J ū NZ ǐ, which means a person who is easy and kind to le. It comes from the book of songs Xiaoya Qingfei.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of songs · Xiaoya · green fly" says: "it is not a gentleman, no letter slander."
Idiom usage
Be the object of; be a kind person. When the sedan chair was near, I could see my parents' two high eyebrows, a big nose and big ears from a distance. I knew in my heart that they were a gentleman. The fourth chapter of Wu Jingzi's unofficial history of the scholars in the Qing Dynasty and Zuo Qiuming's twelve years of Zuo Gong in the spring and Autumn period are devoted to the work of the God. In the five chapters of Ju Rong written by Xiao Yingshi of Tang Dynasty, there are purple and yellow calyx, red and rhinoceros, a gentleman of Kaiti, and you Yi.
Chinese PinYin : kǎi tì jūn zǐ
happy and self-possessed are my noble quests