Be brave
Haoshoucangyan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is h à OSH à UC à ngy á n, which means snow-white hair and gray face; it describes the appearance of the elderly. From noon card.
Idiom explanation
Hao: white appearance; head: hair; face: face.
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Wu Mingshi's "noon card" in Ming Dynasty: "it's quite early that Taigong was fishing, Yiyin was plowing and hoeing, Haoshou was angling, cangyan was in peace, and plowing and hoeing were trying their best to fix the whole world."
Idiom usage
To describe the appearance of an old man. Today, when I return to worship the curtain of mercy, I suddenly feel proud. I must believe that life is like a white horse. The thirty eighth chapter of the romance of Yang Jiajiang by Wu Mingshi in Ming Dynasty
Be brave
one 's eyes flashed like lightning - mù guāng jiǒng jiǒng
wrinkled skin and white hair -- advanced in age - jī fū hè fā
It is a disgrace to let one's parents live in poverty in their old age. - píng qìng léi chǐ