sit square
Sitting upright is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is zh è NGJ ī NW ē Zu ò, which means sitting upright with a whole dress. To describe a serious or formal manner. It comes from the biography of the Japanese in historical records.
Idiom explanation
Front: front of clothes; dangerous sitting: sitting upright. Dress up and sit upright. To describe a serious or formal manner.
Idiom usage
To sit respectfully, seriously or upright. In Song Dynasty, Su Shi's Ode to Chibi: "Su Zi sat upright and asked the guest," why is it natural? " (2) the 100th chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "Yan raised his eyes to see Zhonglian, his spirit was clear and his bones were cool, he was floating with the degree of immortality, and he didn't feel that he was sitting upright." Guo Moruo's "school days: go to Yixing": "Mr. r asked me to sit down in a superior chair and talk with me." Lu Xun's "Hua Gai Ji" after "encountering a wall": "those who hate me always hope that I will be a perfect man. Even if the enemy uses despicable rumors and conspiracies, they should sit upright and have no resentment." 5. In Lev Tolstoy, Zweig said, "I'm sitting in the living room waiting for the master's reception."
The origin of Idioms
"Song Zhong, Jia Yi, Qu Ranwu, and Li Ying were sitting upright and worried," said Sima Qian of the Han Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: whole clothes dangerous sitting, solemn dangerous sitting antonym: prestige not su
Chinese PinYin : zhèng jīn wēi zuò
sit square
conceal the true state of affairs from above and below oneself. qī shàng wǎng xià
The spirit of happiness. rén féng xǐ shì jīng shén shuǎng
look fierce and talk boisterously. jí yán jù sè
the practice of " gathering a few trustworthy people through secret contacts. zhā gēn chuàn lián
everybody will be deterred by the danger. rén rén zì wēi