kindly
Amiable, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ǎ IR á NK ě Q ī n, which means to describe a kind attitude and make people willing to approach. From he Yiling and he Hongbin prize preface.
Idiom explanation
Amiable: the appearance of being kind to people.
The origin of Idioms
Li Kaixian of Ming Dynasty wrote "he Yiling and he Hongbin award different preface" that "up to now, it's only eight months to read. It's absolutely from the grammar of life, except for the harsh and detailed rules. Although it's not to be offended, it's actually amiable." It refers to the appearance of being kind to people. It describes a kind attitude that makes people willing to approach.
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's predicate and attribute; it's commendatory. When I saw him in the same year, I would like to be close to him. ——Chapter 38 of Wenkang's biography of heroes and heroines in Qing Dynasty Li Yu's twelfth floor: seizing Jinlou: "although Xiaojiang is stubborn at home, he is still amiable when he meets his friends outside."
kindly
Green in the evening and red in the morning - mù cuì cháo hóng
the palace of red jade beside the gates of gold - qióng lóu jīn què