good-naturedness leads to propitiousness
Harmony is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is h é Q ì zh ì Xi á ng, which means harmony and good luck. It comes from Liu Xiangzhuan in the history of Han Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
To: incur.
The origin of Idioms
Ban Gu's biography of Liu Xiangzhuan in the book of Han in the Eastern Han Dynasty: "harmony leads to auspiciousness, and obedience leads to difference."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate form; predicate. Chapter 71 of Li Ruzhen's Jing Hua Yuan in Qing Dynasty: the Bauhinia tree came back to life because the Tian family didn't divide their families. Isn't it the proof of "harmony and auspiciousness"? In the book of Han Dynasty, Volume 36, biography of Liu jiaozhuan, king of Chu and Yuan Dynasties, "from this point of view, harmony leads to auspiciousness, and obedience leads to difference." Wei De Lun Ou Gu, written by Cao Zhi of the Three Kingdoms: harmony and auspiciousness. Song · Mei Yaochen's poem "He Ren Xi Yu": harmony can lead to auspiciousness, and the sun and clouds cover the afternoon. harmony, happiness, dorui.
good-naturedness leads to propitiousness
If two people are of one mind, their interests will be broken - èr rén tóng xīn,qí lì duàn jīn
the broken stem of a floating duckweed -- wandering about - duàn gěng piāo péng
work in full cooperation and with unity of purpose - xié lì tóng xīn