Leisurely and upright
Qinqi Leiluo, a Chinese idiom, has a Pinyin of Q ī NQ í L ě ilu ò, which means that the character of metaphor is different from others, and is the same as "the vicissitudes of Qinqi". From scholars.
The origin of Idioms
The first chapter of Wu Jingzi's unofficial history of scholars in the Qing Dynasty: "in the last years of the Yuan Dynasty, there was a man who was upright and upright. This man, surnamed Wang mingmian, lives in the countryside of Zhuji county. "
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of a person's appearance. Example: I have few views on the outstanding people in the world! Preface to renjinglu Shicao by Kang Youwei
Chinese PinYin : qīn qí lěi luò
Leisurely and upright
stick closely to the pattern given. yī yàng huà hú lú
Three festivals and two longevity. sān jié liǎng shòu
get rid of the stale and take in the fresh. qù gù nà xīn
help others to fulfil good deeds. jiāng shùn qí měi