Zu wuzongwen
Zuwuzongwen, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z ǔ w ǔ Z ō NGW é n, which means ancestor inherits King Wu, respects King Wen, and respects ancestors. It comes from the stele of Toutuo Temple written by Liang wangzhong in the Southern Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
According to the inscription of Toutuo Temple written by Liang wangzhong in the Southern Dynasty, "only when the five emperors of Qi succeeded Hong Ming, the three kings of New Zealand had their own business, and their ancestors had the virtue of martial arts and literature, they were promoted and strictly matched, and the work of Ge Tianguang was promoted and revived."
Analysis of Idioms
Related idioms: the abuse of ancestors, the law of ancestors, the Wanwu Xingwen, the flood of blog articles
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : zǔ wǔ zōng wén
Zu wuzongwen
make one 's appearance tally with one 's inner mind. biǎo lǐ yī zhì
Sit on the mountain and watch the tiger fight. zuò shān guān hǔ dòu
Seven measurements and one cut. qī cì liáng yī yī cì cái
Great reward and romantic style. hóng jiǎng fēng liú
almost leave his body in horror. hún fēi shén sàng
the country is defeated and the home lost. wáng guó pò jiā
lament one 's littleness before the vast ocean. wàng yáng xīng tàn