only one foot is crooked and eight feet are straight
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ǎ ngch ǐ zh í x ú n, which means to mean to feel aggrieved in a small place in order to obtain greater benefits. From Mencius Teng Wengong II.
Idiom usage
Zhu Xi's answer to Lu ziyue in Song Dynasty says, "you can't forget the simple things here, and I wish you a deeper understanding of the biography of Daoism. Fortunately, I have never been suspicious of this. "
The origin of Idioms
Mencius Teng Wen Gong Xia: "if you bend your ruler and look for it directly, you should do it if you can." "After the Han Dynasty. Zhang Heng Zhuan" said, "it's not shame to look for it by bending one's feet, to discuss it with hunger, to gain and to lose one's ambition."
Analysis of Idioms
From small to big
Chinese PinYin : wǎng chǐ zhí xún
only one foot is crooked and eight feet are straight
the three cardinal guides and the five constant virtues as specified in the feudal ethical code. sān gāng wǔ cháng
forget the means by which the end is attained. dé yú wàng quán
every house deserves a rank of nobility -- there are wise men everywhere. bǐ wū kě fēng
difficult to keep someone against his will. xīn qù nán liú
the southern mountain might be moved off. nán shān kě yí