The fist does not leave the hand, the tune does not leave the mouth
People who practice martial arts should often practice, and people who sing should often sing. It means that only by studying hard and practicing hard can one be proficient in Kung Fu.
Introduction to Idioms
Ancient Chinese proverb idiom meaning: it means that only by studying hard and practicing hard can one be proficient in Kung Fu. idiom entry: fist does not leave hand, tune does not leave mouth. idiom pronunciation (Pinyin): Qu á Nb ù L í sh ǒ u, Q ǔ B ù L í K ǒ u idiom interpretation: people who practice martial arts should often practice, people who sing should often sing. It means that only by studying hard and practicing hard can one be proficient in Kung Fu. the source of the idiom: Lin Yu's the point of the sword: "the fist never leaves the hand, the tune never leaves the mouth." Idiom example: example 1: we can only master Kung Fu if we keep our fists together and our tunes together. example 2: only when you keep your fists and your tunes together, can you turn the ability you learned in the learning process into your own internal force. In our study, we should stick to the tune and the fist.
Quoted by later generations
This proverb has been incorporated into the 2012 Beijing high school entrance examination instructions. This proverb was later incorporated into the ancient and modern articles (persuasion): Mu Fengchun is still young, and people are never young again. Do not suffer from old age without success, just afraid that children do not learn. The back waves of the Yangtze River push the front waves, and the people of today are better than the ancients. If you spend your time in vain, you will regret it. If you have ambition, you will not grow old. A young idler, an old beggar. study hard and make progress every day. Make steel with perseverance. Three hundred and sixty lines lead to the number one. Ice comes from water and is colder than water, while green comes from blue and is better than blue. When a book is used, it is hard to hate less. The body is afraid of not moving, the brain is afraid of not using. The more skillful the hand is, the more clever the brain is. Three days fishing, two days drying net, half hearted, nothing. One day practice, one day work, one day do not practice, ten days empty. The fist does not leave the hand, the tune does not leave the mouth. If a knife is not polished, it will rust; if a man does not learn, he will fall behind. There is a road to the mountain of books, a path to diligence, a boundless sea of learning, and a boat to work hard. When the master leads in, the cultivation is in himself. Practice makes perfect.
Chinese PinYin : quán bù lí shǒu,qǔ bù lí kǒu
The fist does not leave the hand, the tune does not leave the mouth
to do good and dissuade him from doing evil. quàn shàn jiè è