Lord's clothes
Shengzhu Chuiyi, a Chinese idiom, is sh è ngzh ǔ Chu í y ī in pinyin, which describes the world is peaceful and ruled by inaction. It comes from the book of changes.
The origin of Idioms
"The Yellow Emperor, Yao and Shun dressed and ruled the world, and took Zhuge Liang as the ruler of heaven and earth."
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; used in figurative sentences
Examples
Yuan Gaoming's "Pipa Ji · JingBiao" said: "jade candle harmony, the Lord hanging clothes."
Wang Yi of Han Dynasty wrote Ji Fu: "the emperor Xuanlong leaps, the common business is prosperous. Look up at the three lights. So they made cloth and silk and began to hang down their clothes. "
Wang Chong of the Han Dynasty wrote in Lun Heng · nature: "those who hang their clothes hang their arches and do nothing."
"Wuwei is called Huaxi, and its treatment is based on Chuiyi," says Chen Xuling of the Southern Dynasty
Tang Gaoshi's "ancient song line" said: "the emperor's clothes are square and Yan like, and there is no room for discussion."
Du Guangting of the former Shu Dynasty wrote "he Shengti gradually healed table" that "emperor Fu Wei's Majesty was benevolent in Yuyu, went to daochushang, huizawan District, and was kind to Zhouwu."
Check Shenxing's poem No.2 of "Gongji, a newly carved collection of Royal poems of bestowal": "dig the earth with thousands of people, and play the emperor's clothes with Xiaoshao."
Chinese PinYin : shèng zhǔ chuí yī
Lord's clothes
staunch through trials and tribulations. jiān kǔ zhuó jué
the peach trees were in bloom and the willows were turning green. táo hóng liǔ lǜ
make up deficiency by funds elsewhere. yí dōng jiù xī
sb. who makes minimal corrections and thereby improves a piece of writing. yī zì shī