Yuanchen Yueshi
Yuanzhen Yueshi is a Chinese idiom, and its pinyin is Yu ā NT í ngyu è zh ì, which means that a person's moral character is as deep as an abyss and as high as a mountain. From "Chu Fei Tan".
The origin of Idioms
Shi Chong's poem "the concubine of Chu Tan" in Jin Dynasty: "the king of Jiao and Zhuang, Yuanjian and Yuezhi."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. In the book baopuzi · Mingshi written by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty, it is said that "holding the Scripture and balancing the door, standing upright in the heart and soul, you should keep your body clean to keep stagnant, and you should be shamed to keep your shoulders together." Qian Qianyi of Qing Dynasty wrote in the tablet of Li Gong, the imperial censor of the left capital of the imperial palace of Taibao: "the public was born filial, the friends were obedient and auspicious, and they were sincere and sincere. They stood upright and did not smile." It is also called "Yuanyue" and "Yuanyue". Liu Xie of the Southern Dynasty wrote in Wen Xin Diao Long · Za Wen: "the failure of the body depends on the victory of the Tao. The time is based on the feeling of Tai. It's important for us to have the heart of Yuanyue and the talent of Linfeng."
Chinese PinYin : yuān tíng yuè zhì
Yuanchen Yueshi
the kindness of caring for -- saying of the sons for their parents ' kindness. gù fù zhī ēn
first awakening interest in the opposite sex. qíng dòu chū kāi
The apes cry and the cranes complain. yuán tí hè yuàn
stop the tyranny and prohibit evil. zhǐ bào jìn fēi
rise step by step in the world. bù bù dēng gāo