great forethought
Deep thinking, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ē NJ ì Yu ǎ NL ǜ, which means still thoughtful; well planned, long-term; well planned, far sighted. It comes from the biography of Tian Chou in the annals of the Three Kingdoms.
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Tian Chou in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Zhi: "I'm afraid that I'm not going to get it, but the frivolous people invade and insult each other, steal fast for a while, and have no foresight."
Idiom usage
It's very well planned. The emperor ordered to reduce the royal family's favor. His Majesty was very clear and determined, so he was considerate and gave up love for the people. Song Sushi's admonishment for Zhejiang lantern
Chinese PinYin : shēn jì yuǎn lǜ
great forethought
be neither extravagant nor thrifty. bù fēng bù jiǎn
people jostle each other , talking and laughing. yǔ xiào xuān hū
women who died in defence of their honour. qī zhēn jiǔ liè
spurt out his food by laughing. lìng rén pēn fàn
Universal and straightforward. pǔ tiān shuài tǔ
The top down and the bottom down. dǎo guàn luò pèi
without any complaint to the end of one 's life. mò chǐ wú yuàn