ingrained
Deep rooted, Chinese idioms, pronunciation for G ē NSH ē nd ì g ù, metaphor foundation is solid, not easy to shake. Writing is also "deeply rooted". It comes from Li Er's Laozi in the pre Qin period.
Analysis of Idioms
The synonym is indestructible and hard to return; the antonym is crumbling
The origin of Idioms
In Laozi written by Li Er in pre Qin Dynasty, it is said that "having the mother of a country can last for a long time, which is the way of deep foundation and long life." Han Fei's "Han Feizi · Jielao" in the Warring States Period: "if the foundation is solid, it will grow, and if the root is deep, it will last for a long time."
Idiom usage
It has a solid foundation. The thinking mode of "there is only one right answer" has been unconsciously ingrained in our minds. 2. In the liberated areas of Jiangsu and Zhejiang, the landlord class was severely attacked, but his influence was still deeply rooted. (Liu Danian) (3) but I always want to attack the so-called old civilization, which is deeply rooted, and shake it. I hope there will be a chance in the future. (Lu Xun's book of two places, 11)
ingrained
act according to one 's capability - liàng cái ér wéi
defend those who belong to one 's own faction and attack those who don 't - dǎng tóng fá yì