dignified and imposing
Zhengzhengtang, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh è ngzh è NGT á NGT á ng, which means the banner of Zhengzheng and the line-up of Zhengzheng. It is now used to describe zhengzhengguang. It's from Sun Tzu's military struggle.
The origin of Idioms
Sun Tzu's battle for the Army: "do not strike the battle line without a proper flag."
Idiom usage
Used as an adverbial or attributive; used in writing. Chapter 30 of biography of heroes and heroines written by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "people's words are very serious, but I can't refute them for a while." This is the "nude action photo". Although it's a formal expression of the beauty of human body and health, it's also the "children's block". They don't deserve to see the beauty. Lu Xun's "lacy literature" and "children's blocking"
Chinese PinYin : zhèng zhèng táng táng
dignified and imposing
scattered all over like stars in the sky or men on a chessboard. xīng luó qí bù
Every family speaks for itself. jiā jiàn hù shuō
a scoundrel hates persons of integrity. dào zēng zhǔ rén