employ or appoint people according to their merits
The Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Xu ǎ nxi á NR è NN é ng, which means to select and appoint talents. It is also called "selecting talents and abilities" and "selecting talents and promoting abilities". It comes from the book of the old Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of the old Tang Dynasty, Shi Huo Zhi 1: "it is necessary to set up officials and divide them into different posts, select talents and appoint capable people. If they are qualified, they will benefit the country, and if they are not talented, they will bring trouble to the common people. Therefore, it is necessary to know."
Idiom usage
It refers to cherishing talents. Examples in the words of Tao, those who select talents and appoint talents to rectify the country are the public in the world. In the 53rd volume of the Tang Dynasty, Wang Fuzhi's "on reading Tongjian · emperor chengdi of Han Dynasty" said: "the way to appoint a person is selfless; the appropriate way to judge an official is to apply it to his time."
Chinese PinYin : xuǎn xián rèn néng
employ or appoint people according to their merits
both the higher and lower levels find themselves in a predicament. shàng xià jiāo kùn