Yu Xingshun
Yu Xingshun, a Chinese idiom, is pronounced y ǔ x í ngsh ù NQ ū, which means only imitating the appearance of sages without paying attention to their inner moral cultivation. Later, it is also used to describe following the rules. It comes from Xunzi · feishizi.
explain
It originally refers to imitating the appearance of sages without paying attention to their inner moral cultivation. Later, it is also used to describe following the rules.
source
"Xunzi · Fei shiezi" says: "Yu's behavior and Shun's tendency are the base Confucianism of Zhang's family." Yang Luo's note: "but it's just the authority of the sage."
usage
It refers to the imitation of the well-known ancestors of his husband, who openly thought that the self-improvement of the local party would not do anything, and he was worshipped by the society and enjoyed the dead body of the academic circle. If he was happy, then he had no need to suffer to be strong. On private morality by Liang Qichao
Chinese PinYin : yǔ xíng shùn qū
Yu Xingshun
have the same enemy and hatred. tóng xīn dí kài
Raise children for the old, save grain for hunger. yǎng ér dài lǎo,jī gǔ fáng jī