humanity , justice and morality
Benevolence, righteousness and morality, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R é NY à D à OD é, which means a set of Confucian moral norms. From the original way.
The origin of Idioms
Han Yu, Tang Dynasty, wrote in Yuan Dao: "if the people who are later want to hear the theory of benevolence, righteousness and morality, who will listen to it?"
Idiom usage
It refers to the old moral standard. It's not bad that you say that all people who speak benevolence, righteousness and morality are hypocrites. Act 2 of Qu Yuan by Guo Moruo and Zhao CE 2 of the Warring States strategy: today, we should attach great importance to armour and follow the army, and we should not surmount danger; we should not come to the dynasty because of benevolence, righteousness and morality. The eighth volume of the miscellaneous notes on the green box written by Wu chuhou of Song Dynasty: "the article is pure and ancient, and does not harm it as evil; the article is beautiful, and does not harm it as right. If you talk about flowers and plants and moon dew, you are called evil people. This is not the end of it. " Lu Xun's Diary of a madman 3: "there is no age in this history, and the words" benevolence, righteousness and morality "are written on every crooked page." (here refers to the feudal ethics of cannibalism)
Chinese PinYin : rén yì dào dé
humanity , justice and morality
save the country and its people. jiù mín shuǐ huǒ
Sharp mouth and quick tongue. zuǐ jiān shé tóu kuài