be chivalrous and fond of doing good deeds
Chivalrous, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is x í ngxi á h ǎ oy ì, which means to speak of righteousness, willing to help others. It comes from the 30th chapter of three heroes and five righteousness by Qing Shi Yukun.
Idiom explanation
It means to be loyal and willing to help others.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 30 of three chivalrous men and five righteousness written by Shi Yukun of Qing Dynasty: there is only the fifth master who is young, gorgeous, extraordinary, insidious and vicious, but good at chivalry and righteousness. Chen Tongsheng's the Pearl River storm: "I think he must be the head of the elder brother Association, or he must be a chivalrous old man."
Chinese PinYin : xíng xiá hào yì
be chivalrous and fond of doing good deeds
gain mastery by striking only after the enemy has struck. hòu fā zhì rén
Spurt blood to pollute oneself. pēn xuè zì wū
like gathering of birds and fishes. niǎo jí lín cuì