lay it to heart in all reverence
Quan Quan Fu Ying, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qu á nqu á NF ú y ī ng, which means to remember earnestly. From the book of rites, the doctrine of the mean.
Idiom explanation
Boxing: holding tightly, extending to sincerity; obedience: keeping in mind.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, the doctrine of the mean: "if you get a good deed, you will win it and lose it."
Idiom usage
To be formal; to be predicative; to be earnest. Example when you return to a person, you should choose the mean. If you get a good result, you will be able to accept it without losing it. Han Yu's Yi Zhi Yi and Zhu Xi's Si Shu Ji Zhu: "Fu is still a book; Ying is also a chest. In the heart and mind of holding, words can be kept
Chinese PinYin : quán quán fú yīng
lay it to heart in all reverence
be unable to sit down or sleep at ease. zuò wò bù níng
infringe upon the prevalent social conventions. wéi shí jué sú
Three inch bird, seven inch mouth. sān cùn niǎo,qī cùn zuǐ
sell at a good profit -- to wait for an opportunity and sell at a high price. shàn jià ér gū