glorify and illuminate the ancestors
Xianzu Rongzong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi ǎ NZ ǔ R ó ngz ō ng, which means to make the ancestor's reputation famous. It comes from the Ming Dynasty's Wu Ming's Wei Zheng Gai Zhao.
Idiom usage
Used as predicate, attribute, object, etc
Examples
Such as junchenjihui, by the king Fenglu, loyal to the king, and later his wife and son, honor their ancestors, are given by the king.
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's Wei Zheng Gai Zhao: "to win a high official salary, we should respect and be loyal to things, and we should stand up and do our way, and show our ancestors."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: showing off one's ancestors and glorifying one's ancestors
Idiom explanation
To command the fame of one's ancestors. It is the same as "showing off one's ancestors and promoting one's ancestors".
Chinese PinYin : xiǎn zǔ róng zōng
glorify and illuminate the ancestors
as clean as ice and as pure as jade. bīng qīng yù rùn
Remove the hole with leather belt. gé dài yí kǒng
feel irreconcilable hatred for sb. bù tóng dài tiān
the summer rain soothes people -- a timely help to the masses. xià yǔ yǔ rén
The same thing as the same thing. zhǐ shì lèi qíng