Three good and two timid
Three good and two timid, Chinese idiom, Pinyin s ā NH ǎ o è RQI è, means when good, when sick, describes the weak. It's from qingpingshan hall story book: love between the wind and the moon.
Idiom explanation
It refers to good times and ill times. It describes weakness. The same as "three good and two evil".
The origin of Idioms
In Ming Dynasty, Hong Hong Hong's qingpingshantang story book, lovesickness between wind and moon, says: "since the lady met Feng Guanren, she has been so kind and timid."
Analysis of Idioms
Three good and two evil
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or object; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : sān hǎo èr qiè
Three good and two timid
put the trivial above the important. qīng zhòng dào zhì
all kinds of work , no matter how big or trivial. shì wú jù xì
play the jackal to the tiger. wèi hǔ zuò chāng
People fear fame and pigs fear strength. rén pà chū míng zhū pà zhuàng