Good years
Sui Ren Nian Feng, pronounced Su ì R ě NNI á NF ē ng, is an idiom, which refers to the agricultural harvest. It comes from the fourth fold of Ming Dynasty's Wu Ming's Shi Yang Jin.
The crops are ripe. A good harvest in agriculture. The fourth fold of Ming Wumingshi's ten sample Brocade: "today, a king, a saint, a minister, and a virtuous man govern, and the years of his education are rich and fast."
Chinese PinYin : suì rěn nián fēng
Good years
put the interest of others above one 's own. xiān rén hòu jǐ
glorify and illuminate the ancestors. yào zǔ róng zōng
A rat goes into a bull's horn. shǔ rù niú jiǎo