splendor
Chinese idiom,
Pinyin is R ó nghu á f ù Gu ì,
Interpretation: refers to prosperity or prosperity. Money and power.
From Guanzi Chongling.
Entry
splendor
Pinyin
rónghuáfùguì
Citation explanation
It is used to describe a person who is prosperous and rich and has a lot of wealth. In Guanzi Chongling, it is said that "all the officials must be open to the outside world, take the right way, act accordingly, regard wealth as glory and youth as the opposite." In Wang Fu's Qian Fu Lun Lun Rong of Han Dynasty, it is said that "the so-called virtuous man and gentleman need not be high in position, wealth and glory." Shen zuozhi's "Yujian" in Song Dynasty: "it's related to the common customs; though it's in glory and wealth, there's nothing satisfactory." Lin Mengchu, Ming Dynasty, the 22nd book of surprise at the first moment: it is said that life is rich and prosperous, and most of the flowers in front of us are empty, so we can't think of them as reality. Chapter 118 of a dream of Red Mansions by Cao Xueqin in Qing Dynasty. Chapter 1 and 2 of the history of civilization: I advise you to report your illness and return home early, or have a bowl of rice to eat, and I don't want to enjoy your official glory
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] treat the superior with respect, the house full of gold and jade
Idiom usage
It is ironic that it can be used as predicate, object and attribute
Chinese PinYin : róng huá fù guì
splendor
the graceful strokes of calligraphic works. měi nǚ zān huā
to work hard and live plainly and frugally. gōng kǔ shí jiǎn
hate the wicked and point out only the evil which one has done. wù wù cóng duǎn