worry about troubles of one 's own imagining
Mediocrity is an idiom, the pronunciation is y ō NgR é NZ ì R ǎ o, which means that originally nothing, their own trouble. It comes from the biography of Lu Xiang in the book of the new Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
"The new Tang Dynasty · Lu Xiang first biography:" the world is nothing, mediocre disturbance and trouble ears
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: worry for the ancients, worry for the ancients
Idiom usage
He walked around the room half a circle, stopped at the door, turned his back to Zheng Chenggong and said with warning, "don't ~" The third chapter of Hua Ershi's Han Yiguan
Idiom story
Lu Xiangxian, the governor of Puzhou in the Tang Dynasty, was very tolerant of his subordinates. He criticized and educated the officials who made mistakes, so many people thought that he was conniving the officials to make mistakes. Once an official made a mistake. Lu Xiangxian criticized him. His secretary said corporal punishment, but Lu Xiangxian opposed it. The Secretary retreated and said, "there is nothing wrong in the world, but mediocre people disturb it."
Chinese PinYin : yōng rén zì rǎo
worry about troubles of one 's own imagining
by juggling with deceit made it real. nòng jiǎ chéng zhēn
Waiting for words in the boudoir. dài zì guī zhōng
in western dress and leather shoes. xī zhuāng gé lǚ