Yue Zhiyuan
Yue zhiyuanzhen, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu è zh ì Yu ā NT í ng, which means standing like a mountain and stagnating like an abyss; originally used to describe the stability and unshakability of the army; later used to describe the firmness and composure of people. It comes from Tao junbei, a hermit living in Zhenbai.
The origin of Idioms
In the stele of Tao Jun, a hermit living in Zhenbai, written by Liang xiaolun in the Southern Dynasty, it is "benevolent and righteous, yuezhiyuanzhen"
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. example Yue Zhiyuan is honest and upright, and the will of heaven and public opinion should be consistent. Liu Yazi's poem entitled the portrait of Chairman Mao on October 6
Chinese PinYin : yuè zhì yuān tíng
Yue Zhiyuan
break the cauldrons and sink boats. chén zhōu pò fǔ
preserve one 's personality in old age. hán huā wǎn jié
A full man knows not a hungry man. bǎo rén bù zhī è rén jī