entrust to another 's care the children one is about to leave behind as orphans
In Chinese, Pinyin is Tu ō g ū J ì m ì ng, which means to be entrusted by the will to assist the young monarch; or to take charge of the government when the monarch is in mourning. It also generally refers to the heavy task entrusted to us. From the Analects of Confucius, Taibo.
The source of the idiom is "the Analects of Confucius · Taibo": "you can trust a lonely person of six feet, you can send a life of a hundred miles." Xing Minshu: "those who can entrust a six foot orphan are those who can entrust a young and young monarch. If the Duke of Zhou and Huo Guang can send a hundred Li's life, it means that the emperor is in the light of Yin, and he can be the official order of the state. "
Chinese PinYin : xíng gū jì mìng
entrust to another 's care the children one is about to leave behind as orphans
love the subjects as if they were his own children. ài mín rú zǐ
exercise one's inventive mind. dú yùn jiàng xīn
Read more than ten thousand books. dú shū pò wàn juàn
talk of everything under the sun. tán tiān shuō dì