It's better to meet than to be famous
It's better to be famous than to meet.
Better to meet than to be famous
Pronunciation w é nm í NGB à R ú Ji à NMI à n
It's better to listen to fame than to meet.
Source of "biography of women in northern history": "it's better for me to meet when I've heard that I'm famous. If I don't see etiquette, I'm not to blame."
Wang BOGAO, for example, was not amused. He even said, "my brother is really a pleasant person." (Chapter 27 of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty)
Seeing is better than hearing
Used as an object or attribute; used to admonish
I can't hear you face to face. It often means more admiration. In the biography of women in northern history, Fang AI's wife Cui Shi: "it's better for me to meet you when I hear that you are famous. If you don't see any etiquette, why should you blame me?" The third chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "Lu tiha hastened to return a gift, saying:" it's better to meet than to be famous, and it's better to meet than to be famous! " Chapter 97 of twenty years of witnessing the strange situation: "I've heard a lot about the names of these two. I met today. It's better to meet them than to be famous." "It's better to meet than to be famous," said Lin Jinlan in 1937 and 1933, the Red Army with bamboo pipes on its back. Du Baiyu saw this team and thought it was even more magical than the legendary one. "
Idiom dictionary has the entry: better to meet than to be famous
Chinese PinYin : wén míng bù rú jiàn miàn
It's better to meet than to be famous
Right and wrong just for more. shì fēi zhī wèi duō kāi kǒu
one need not look far for a lesson. yīn jiàn bù yuǎn
heavy drinker with a unconstrained character. gāo yáng jiǔ tú
Share happiness and difficulties together. yǒu fú tóng xiǎng,yǒu nàn tóng dāng