treat able men and scholars with the greatest courtesy
Honoring the virtuous, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is j ì ngxi á NL ǐ sh ì, which means respecting people with noble morality and outstanding knowledge. It comes from the biography of Zhang daozhuan in the book of Jin.
idiom
treat able men and scholars with the greatest courtesy
Pinyin
jìngxiánlǐshì
Citation explanation
Respect people with high moral character and outstanding knowledge. In the book of Jin, the biography of Zhang daozhuan: "the real son is an Xun, who is wise in learning, respects the virtuous and loves the scholar, and takes the scholar as the doctor." The third chapter of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong in Ming Dynasty: Dong Zhuo is a man of honor and courtesy, with clear rewards and punishments. Chapter 42 of romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: General sun, who lives in six prefectures, has a good army and plenty of food. He also respects the virtuous and courteous people, and is a hero of the river. This is your plan. Don't send your confidants to tie up with the east Wu, so as to jointly plan major events. ming · Wu Mingshi's "Pang Lue Si Jun" the fourth fold: Xuande Gong accepted remonstrance and respected the virtuous. Chapter 26 of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai of the Qing Dynasty: "the minister said that the wolf master was lenient to Hong Rende and respected the virtuous and courteous people
words whose meaning is similar
Courtesy and respect
Idiom usage
It refers to respecting talents
treat able men and scholars with the greatest courtesy
beat wildly with one 's fists on the bed and the pillows - chuí chuáng pāi zhěn
Single is easy to break, many is hard to break - dān zé yì zhé,zhòng zé nán cuī
rise head and shoulders above others - chū rén tóu dì
accumulate old habit becomes custom - jī xí chéng sú