Huadihewan
Hua Di he wan, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Hu à D í Hu à w á n, which means to praise the mother's ability to teach children. From the tiger's amulet.
The origin of Idioms
Guo Moruo's "tiger Fu" appendix "the origin of writing": "but to write about maternal love, when children are young, it is easy to show, such as pushing dry to wet, painting grass and pills, and so on. It is the children's childhood."
Idiom story
In Song Dynasty, when Ouyang Xiu was young, his mother, Zheng's family, taught his son to study by painting land with silver grass. Liu Zhongying's mother Han used bear gall and meatballs to make her swallow at night to refresh her mind.
Huadihewan
green pines and verdant cypresses - cāng sōng cuì bǎi
one 's eyes grow round with delight at the sight of money - jiàn qián yǎn kāi
sit idle and eat , and in time one 's whole fortune will be used up - zuò chī shān bēng
be courteous to the wise and condescending to scholars - lǐ xián xià shì