each family is provided for and each person is well-fed and well-clothed
The Chinese idiom, R é NJ ǐ Ji ā Z ú in pinyin, means that every family has enough food and clothing. It comes from the book of historical records.
Idiom explanation
To: affluence, abundance.
The origin of Idioms
Sima Qian of the Western Han Dynasty wrote in historical records pingzhunshu: "during the 70 years since the Han Dynasty, there was nothing wrong with the country, but floods and droughts
Idiom usage
It refers to social prosperity. Example: the soil is suitable for ginger and taro, and the water is rich in frogs and fish, so the poor can provide for their families. The biography of Dongfang Shuo
Idiom story
During the Warring States period, Mozi, a craftsman of the Song Dynasty, was dissatisfied with the complicated "ceremony" of Confucianism, so he set up a new theory and advocated "non Confucianism". Mohist members advocate "thrifty use" and "thrifty burial". They live in earth houses, eat coarse food and wear linen clothes. They help each other, strictly abide by discipline and obey the leader. They emphasize strengthening agriculture, saving money, making everyone warm and every family rich.
Chinese PinYin : rén jǐ jiā zú
each family is provided for and each person is well-fed and well-clothed
demolish with penetrating criticism. biān pì jìn lǐ
in one 's humble position , one 's word does not carry much weight. rén wēi yán jiàn
undue delay may bring trouble. yè cháng mèng duō
be adjustable to circumstances. suí gāo jiù dī
have no place too ashamed to show one 's face. wú dì zì cuò