Ruyuan suihuai
Rouyuan suihuai, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ó uyu ǎ NSU í Hu á I, which means to appease those who are far away. It comes from Lin Zexu's "instructing merchants of various countries to submit manuscripts of tobacco and soil".
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
Lin Zexu of the Qing Dynasty wrote in his book instructing merchants from all over the world to submit manuscripts of tobacco and soil: "although the emperor is gentle and distant, he can't be allowed to despise and play. He should follow the new rules and punish severely."
Idiom explanation
Pacify those who are far away. Cherish, attach.
Chinese PinYin : róu yuǎn suí huái
Ruyuan suihuai
decide on what path to follow. hé qù hé cóng
personally practise thrifty. gōng xíng jié jiǎn
die to preserve one's virtue intact. qǔ yì chéng rén
cut the bones between the joints and make use of the momentum to decompose the boneless parts. pī xì dǎo yín