Enjoy the near and the far
Yuejinlaiyuan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu è J ì NL á iyu ǎ n, which means to make the near happy and the far happy. From the Analects of Confucius · Zilu.
Analysis of Idioms
[similar words] near joy comes far away [rhyme words] full of ears, when things are in trouble, you have to be bold, long and short, you have to throw your eggs in the wrong place, you have to break your heart, you have to smoke your eyes, you have to be gloomy, you have to be worried, you have to see and hear
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Zilu: "the near is happy, the far is coming."
Idiom usage
It refers to the ruler. He wanted to be near and far away. He also wanted to be different from Huarong. Biography of Yang Bo in the book of Wei
Idioms and allusions
In the spring and Autumn period, Shen Zhuliang, a senior official of the state of Chu, was known as Ye Gong because he granted land to Ye. Confucius traveled around the country and came to Ye Yi of the state of Chu. Ye Gong asked him how to govern a place. Confucius replied, "those who are near will be happy, and those who are far away will come." Tell him to make the people in the territory happy first, so people from afar will come to join him.
Chinese PinYin : yuè jìn lái yuǎn
Enjoy the near and the far
veiled and roundabout expressions. yǐn huì qū zhé
a great ability to rule the country. jīng shì zhī cái
tell lies about this and about that. shu huang dao hei
many thoughts crowded in upon sb. bǎi duān jiāo jí