open one 's heart wide and lay bare one 's thoughts
Heart to heart is a Chinese idiom,
Pinyin is Q ī NGX ī NT ǔ D ǎ n,
Paraphrase: a metaphor for saying what is in your heart.
Entry
open one 's heart wide and lay bare one 's thoughts
Pinyin
qīngxīntǔdǎn
Citation explanation
This is a metaphor for saying what is in your heart. Yuan · Li Xingdao's second discount of "the story of the gray appendix": "every time I buy something that I can't turn it around, I will speak the truth with all my heart." In Yuan Dynasty, Yang Xianzhi's the first fold of cold pavilion: "I'm afraid that if I don't wait to discuss marriage with all my heart, it's all about hiding things from gods and ghosts and asking for food." Chapter 14 of Shi Naian's the complete story of the Water Margin: there is no outsider here, so you can confide in your brother. Shi Naian's Water Margin chapter 38 "timely rain meeting God line Taibao": Dai Zong also confided in telling the Wu scholar about his association. In the 60th chapter of Water Margin by Shi Naian of Ming Dynasty, Gongsun shengmangdangshan subdues the devil, Chao Tianwang and zengtou city is hit by an arrow. The three meet Song Jiang without any doubt. They confide in each other and tell the story of their lives. Chapter 68 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in the Qing Dynasty: "so I confided in her and talked about it once, but I thought of her as a confidant."
usage
Treat others sincerely
Chinese PinYin : qīng xīn tǔ dǎn
open one 's heart wide and lay bare one 's thoughts
glorify virtue and censure vice. bāo shàn biǎn è