sublime words with deep meaning
In Chinese, Pinyin is w ē iy á nd à y ì, which means the profound truth contained in the subtle language. It's from Dr. Chang's book.
Idiom explanation
Weiyan: precise and profound words; Dayi: originally refers to the gist of the Scriptures, and then refers to the great truth.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xin of the Han Dynasty wrote in the book of Dr. Taichang: "when my master died, I would say nothing, but when I was seventy, I would be good." Yi Wen Zhi of Han Dynasty: "xizhongni didn't speak very much, but his seventy sons died and were obedient."
Idiom usage
It's a combination; it's subject and object; it's commendatory. In fact, the so-called ~ is only their own historical philosophy and political philosophy. Zhu Ziqing's classic talks: Shangshu No.3
Analysis of Idioms
[near synonym] far-reaching and concise; antonym] empty; lantern riddle: a summary of the novel
Chinese PinYin : wēi yán dà yì
sublime words with deep meaning
Praising virtue and praising merit. sòng dé gē gōng
play off one power against another. yǐ yí fá yí
A lot of people talk to each other. zhòng kǒu xūn tiān
rob the owner while his house is on fire. chèn huǒ qiǎng jié
untidy appearance with prisoner 's unkempt hair and unwashed face. qiú shǒu gòu miàn
talented and romantic scholar. fēng liú cái zǐ