The bandit's bow
Jian Jian Gong is an idiom, and its pronunciation is Ji ǎ NJI ǎ NF ě Ig ō ng, which means to be loyal to the monarchy.
explain
It means to be loyal to the monarchy. It is also called "bow". Jian, Tongjian, honest and upright. Bandit, no, it's not. Bow, body. Bandit bow, refers to loyalty, regardless of their own.
source
Jian of Yi: "on June 2, Jian of Wang Chen was the reason why bandits bowed."
Examples
Those who disobey the orders and violate the rules will be the people of Anshang. Jin Gehong's "baopuzi · chenjie" and "Yi · Jian" said: "June 2, Wang Chenjian, bandits bow." Gao Heng's note: "it's not his personal business, but the business of the monarch and the country that Yan Wang's minister Jian admonished." Later, he was loyal to the monarchy because of his "bow". Jian is the key to success.
usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used of someone who dares to speak
The bandit's bow
swear allegiance facing the north - běi miàn chēng chén
as closely linked as flesh and blood - gǔ ròu xiāng lián
The situation is extremely serious - jú tiān kòu dì
If there are enough utensils, there will be plenty - qì mǎn zé fù