Father disjunctive son lotus
Father disjuncting son lotus, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ù x ī Z ǐ h é, which means that the father cuts firewood and the son bears firewood; it means that the descendants inherit the unfinished business of their parents. It comes from the inscriptions on the Shinto of Cui Fujun, the magistrate of Changcheng County, Chaozhou in the Tang Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In the Tang Dynasty, Bai Juyi wrote an inscription on the Shinto of cuifujun, the great wall county magistrate of Chaozhou in the Tang Dynasty: "the eldest man stores up material skills, sets up utilitarianism, builds up wealth, and glorifies his family and country. He should not be his own body, but his own; how different is his father from his son
Idiom usage
Used as an object, attribute, etc. example father and son. Happiness and sorrow gather at the same gate. The ode to birds by Jia Yi of Han Dynasty
Father disjunctive son lotus
tell part of the truth but not all of it - cáng tóu lù wěi
stand by watching others battle - zuò bì shàng guān
When water is wet, fire is dry - shuǐ liú shī,huǒ jiù zào