East and West
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is d à ngzhi à NGX à Yu à n, originally refers to the Shang Tang to one side of the expedition, then the other side of the people complain that he did not come first to save himself; later refers to the emperor's benevolent teacher for the people, loved by the people. It comes from the book Zhonghui Zhigao.
The origin of Idioms
In the book Zhonghui Zhigao: "only the king does not care about his voice and color, does not cultivate goods and profits, is a virtuous official, is a virtuous reward The eastern expedition was against the West and the southern expedition against the north. "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. example the ancient sage Wang, who fought East and West. Care not to be virtuous, but to work hard. Lu Zhi, Tang Dynasty, the imperial edict of the Yuan government and the people of Yangfeng Prefecture.
East and West
destory the army and kill the general - fù jūn shā jiāng
The big part is bigger than the stock - jìng dà yú gǔ
hate to leave a place where one has lived long - ān gù zhòng qiān