Be happy to persuade
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is l è sh à Qu à ng à ng, which means to be willing to engage in the industry and strive to achieve results. It comes from the book of rites, the king system.
The origin of Idioms
Dai Sheng's book of rites king system in the Western Han Dynasty: "there is no open land, no vagrant, food festival, people live in Xian'an, happy to persuade."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Han huankuan's on salt and iron, water and drought: if the utensils are convenient, they have to work more with less effort, and the farmers are happy to persuade them.
Be happy to persuade
share with relatives and friends - zhān qīn dài yǒu
Willing to cut all over, dare to pull the emperor down - shě dé yī shēn guǎ,gǎn bǎ huáng dì lāxiàmǎ