learned men and advisors
Fajiafushi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ǎ Ji ā B ì sh ì, which means loyal officials and sages. It comes from the second chapter of Mencius.
Notes on Idioms
Fu: through "Bi". Legalists: Ministers of mingfadu; Fushi: officials of Fubi.
The origin of Idioms
"Mencius · Gaozi Part 2:" if you enter, there will be no Legalists; if you leave, there will be no enemies and foreign invaders, and the country will perish forever. "
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute, it refers to loyal officials and sages. In Zhang Binglin's dingkong: "Mencius and Xunqing spoke of Legalists and scholars, while Xunqing called them" family language and evil learning ". “
learned men and advisors
occupy some place , belonging to another - què cháo jiū jù
the members of one 's family are partly dispersed and partly dead - jiā pò rén wáng
one's eyes brimming with radiating vigour - jiǒng jiǒng yǒu shén