Disaster relief
Disaster relief, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ji ù Z ā IX ù Hu à n, which means to save others or other people's disaster. It's from the book burning, miscellaneous narration and Han Deng Xiaohua.
Idiom explanation
T-shirt: relief. It refers to rescuing the disaster of others.
The origin of Idioms
Li Zhi of the Ming Dynasty wrote in burning books, miscellaneous statements and Han Deng's anecdotes: "today's money is regarded as dirt. Is it to seek the king and seek hegemony, and to make friends with the guests? To suppress and rescue the disaster, but to stimulate the righteous, we can't use ourselves? "
Idiom usage
Today, I have been burning the valley and conquering the Song Dynasty, causing trouble in the Central Plains. This heaven has given me the name of disaster relief. The thirty ninth chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong in Ming Dynasty
Disaster relief
The mink is insufficient, the dog tail continues - diāo bù zú,gǒu wěi xù
cut off communication with the outside world - bì kǒu què guǐ
it takes a hundred years to educate the people - bǎi nián shù rén
the wrangling guest robs the place of the host - xuān bīn duó zhǔ