A dead man
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is sh ī Ji ū zh ī P í ng, which means that the monarch treats his subjects fairly. It comes from the book of songs, Cao Feng, and the dove.
Analysis of Idioms
The benevolence of a corpse dove
Idiom usage
In the book of the later Han Dynasty, Yuan Shaozhuan: "the only way to make a fool of a courtier is to keep his temper and avoid evil flattery."
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of songs, Cao Feng, Yu Jiu: "Yu Jiu is in sang, and his son is seven." Mao Heng said: "the dove's son, from the top down in the morning, from the bottom up in the evening, the average is the same."
Chinese PinYin : shī jiū zhī píng
A dead man
Open your mouth and see your throat. kāi kǒu jiàn hóu lóng
The crane is long and the duck is short. hè cháng fú duǎn
Everything is ready but the east wind. wàn shì jù bèi,zhǐ qiàn dōng fēng