invite to one 's side men of wisdom and valor
Recruiting talents, a Chinese idiom, is spelled with the sound "zh ā oxi á NN à sh ì", which means recruiting talents and accepting scholars. It comes from the first yance of the Warring States period.
Notes on Idioms
Recruit: recruit; virtuous: virtuous and talented people; accept: accept; scholar: refers to scholars.
The origin of Idioms
Yance I: King Yanzhao ascended the throne, humbling himself and making thick coins to recruit sages.
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, object and attribute; it means to recruit talents. The second part of Chen Tuan Gao wo (Chen Tuan Gao Wo) by Ma Zhiyuan in the Yuan Dynasty: it was the first time that the people of Li Dynasty were attracted, and then the people of Li Dynasty were invited to be courteous and courteous, and the money and silk were lost. The second part of Guan Hanqing's cry and smile in Yuan Dynasty: he broke Huang Chao with you, defeated GUI Ba, defeated Zhu Wen, then he recruited talented people in the meantime, and today I'm not going to be able to cultivate my martial arts. Chapter 9 of Shi Naian's the complete story of the water margin in Ming Dynasty: here is Chai Daguan. Ming Shi Naian's Water Margin Chapter 19: Lin Chong's water stronghold and Chao Gai's Liangshan's small capture of the park: I've heard about the mountain's recruitment of talents for a long time, and I've come all the way to join the gang. If it's not compatible, we'll leave on our own. The eighth chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty: lead the army to live in Jiangdu, recruit talented people, bend oneself to others, and gradually throw themselves into it. be nothing difficult. Chapter 98 of the chronicles of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of Ming Dynasty.
Chinese PinYin : zhāo xián nà shì
invite to one 's side men of wisdom and valor
come over and pledge allegiance. shù shēn zì xiū