A rich family
Fengwu family is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is f ē NGW ū B ù Ji ā, which refers to the deep self concealment and refusal to become an official. It also refers to the high officials showing their wealth. From Yi Feng.
The idiom comes from Yi Feng: "on the sixth day of the year, enrich one's house, enrich one's family, protect one's family, be quiet and uninhabited, be not angry at the age of three, be fierce." Wang Bi's note: "it's not only rich in its house, but also rich in its home. The house is thick and the home is covered. It's very dark. Although we can see the house, we can see no one, abandon the place, and hide ourselves. When Ming Xun was still a great man, he was deeply in seclusion. When he was high in his deeds, he was not able to see the great way. He was not good at seclusion. He was even more sinister
A rich family
kindly in appearance but unfathomable at heart - hòu mào shēn cí
one 's words are obeyed , and one 's plans are followed out sb . 's advice and adopt his plan - yán tīng jì yòng
shoulder to shoulder and hub to hub - mó jiān jī gǔ