make comments about the good or the evil of a character
Yue Dan Chun Qiu, a Chinese idiom, is Yu è D à NCH à nqi à in pinyin, which refers to the quality of commenting on characters. It comes from Xu Shao, biography of Guo Fu and Xu liezhuan, volume 68 of Houhanshu.
Idiom usage
Li Yu of Qing Dynasty wrote shenluanjiao Xingui: "I have a lot of beard and nose. I can be very happy. I can't live up to my comments on Runan." Lu guimeng's poem "expressing despicable feelings again and attacking beauty with extending rewards" in Tang Dynasty: "even if there is a comment on the moon, it can't be known by the world." In the book of Wu Ji in spring, Wu Jian, written by Wang Di of Ming Dynasty, it is said that "the heart bears the ambition of the clouds, and the name is Gao yuedan." "Brother Liang's eyes are as big as beans, but he also shakes his lips and criticizes. Is that enough for yuedan's comment Yang Yi of the Song Dynasty wrote "thirty rhymes of writing on the basis of the imperial edict for the revision of a book about the feelings of the heart": "the monthly review is in accordance with Xu Shao, and the style is similar."
The origin of Idioms
Xu Shaozhuan in the book of the later Han Dynasty: "at the beginning, Shao and Jing (shaocong elder brother) were both well-known. They were fond of discussing the characters of the local party together and frequently changed their titles every month. Therefore, they were popular in Runan and commented on yuedan."
Analysis of Idioms
Zang Yu's character
Chinese PinYin : yuè dàn chūn qiū
make comments about the good or the evil of a character
one does not do what one has learned. xué fēi suǒ yòng
We are anxious about gain and loss. guǐ dé guǐ shī