Filial piety and Li Tian
Xiaoti Litian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Xi à ot à L à Ti á n, which means to be filial to parents, respect brothers and work hard in agriculture. It comes from the book of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of the Han Dynasty, the Emperor Wen Ji said: "the three elders who were sent to pay homage to him were Lao, five were filial and five were silk, two were brotherhood and two were Li Tian The household registration rate should be used to set up a regular member of the three elders, filial piety and fraternity
Idiom usage
Example: Chapter 23 of Jing Hua Yuan written by Li Ruzhen in Qing Dynasty: "there are gold lettered plaques in the capital of the gate, some of which are written" virtuous and upright "and some of which are written" to "
Chinese PinYin : xiào tì lì tián
Filial piety and Li Tian
console oneself with false hopes. shuō méi zhǐ kě
There is no place for heroes. yīng xióng wú yòng wǔ zhī dì
spilled water cannot be gathered up. fù shuǐ nán shōu