Pick up a Book
It is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is Z á ozh ù Q ǔ sh ū, which means adhering to the teachings of our ancestors. It comes from Wang Kaiyun's tablet of the God of Changgong.
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
The origin of Idioms
Wang Kaiyun's "monument to the God of Changgong" said: "the spirit of the mountains and rivers, the spirit of the jade, chisel the pillar to get the book, and learn the rites."
Idiom explanation
It refers to adhering to the teachings of our ancestors.
Chinese PinYin : záo zhù qǔ shū
Pick up a Book
homeless and wandering from place to place. liú lí diān shǔ
pass through the clouds and break the rocks. chuān yún liè shí
Break the family for the country. pò jiā wéi guó
To be selfish and to be public. fèi sī lì gōng
long distance separates no bosom friends. tiān yá bǐ lín