Love your master
A Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Qu ǎ nm ǎ Li à nzh ǔ, which means that the subject cares for the emperor. It comes from the list of poems in response to the imperial edict.
The origin of Idioms
"Looking at the opposite side, I can't help but love my master."
Idiom usage
It refers to loyalty. example although the Empress Dowager and the emperor have inquired about it in detail, they still feel that they are not satisfied with it, and they are going to Sichuan soon. I don't know when I will see them. I can't help but love my master. Gao Yang's Ci Xi Quan Zhuan 98 song Bao Zhao's poem "from Linhai king to Jingchu to Xinzhu" in the Southern Dynasty: "Hu Tu cherishes cave ambition, dogs and horses love each other."
Chinese PinYin : quǎn mǎ liàn zhǔ
Love your master
The upper beam is not straight and the lower beam is crooked. shàng liáng bù zhèng xià liáng wāi
trim one's sails to the wind. suí fēng dǎo duò
put one's heart and soul into. quán xīn quán yì
Dragon's eyebrows and leopard's neck. lóng méi bào jǐng