Be willing to live in poverty
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā NP í NSH ǒ UF ē n, meaning willing to suffer poverty, abide by the duty. From Wu Qi's enemy Qin.
Notes on Idioms
Willing to be poor: willing to be poor. Keep points: keep your duty, don't think about it, don't do it.
The origin of Idioms
The fourth fold of Wu Qi Di Qin written by Wu Mingshi in Ming Dynasty: "you can't stop studying in a closed house, you can't live up to your poverty, you can't live up to your point."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, object; used in life.
Be willing to live in poverty
when a book is copied thrice , some characters become alike - wū yān chéng mǎ
the sincerity of offering the warmth of the sun to sb - xiàn pù zhī chén
affection loses with beauty withering away - sè shuāi ài chí
the time when spring breezes bring the news of the flowers - huā xìn nián huá