A fool may have a lot to worry about
It is a Chinese idiom, pronounced y ú zh ě Qi āǜ NL ǜ, Hu ò y ǒ uy ī D é, which means that there will always be some merits in the many considerations of a fool. He often refers to himself with modesty.
explain
[idiom] a fool may have a thousand worries, or one gain [Pinyin] y ú zh ě Qi ā NL ǜ, Hu ò y ǒ uy ī D é [interpretation] means that there are always some merits in the many thoughts of a fool. He often refers to himself with modesty.
source
Lin Yun of Tang Dynasty wrote in the book of war by Prime Minister Yuanheng Hongjing: "if there is any evil, it's the heart of the prime minister who dares not to crack his liver and gall. A fool may have a lot to worry about. I'd like to give you less choice. "
Chinese PinYin : yú zhě qiān lǜ,huò yǒu yī dé
A fool may have a lot to worry about
patiently attend to a grave problem. jí mài huǎn jiù
Three rivers and seven rivers. sān jiāng qī zé
valiant and heroic in bearing. yīng zī sà shuǎng
a few isolated words and phrases. piàn yán zhǐ yǔ
one 's mind settles as still water. xīn rú zhǐ shuǐ