A man of honor
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Q ī NGC á ij ì ngsh ì, which means to despise money and attach importance to scholars. They are the same as those who are light on wealth and heavy on wealth. It comes from the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wu annals and biography of Gan Ning.
Analysis of Idioms
A man of great wealth
The origin of Idioms
Chen Shou's biography of Gan Ning in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wu Zhi, said: "although Ning is rough and fierce, he is good at killing, but he is open and cool. He has a strategy. He is light on money and respectful. He can support healthy children."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate, attribute, or object.
A man of honor
If you swallow a boat, it is a leak - tūn zhōu shì lòu
work very hard regardless of weather - mù yǔ shū fēng
to live in complacency on barely sufficient or insecure means - tōu ān dàn xī
change existing habits and customs - yí fēng píng sú
Criticizing the red and judging the white - pī hóng pàn bái
a dried up tree comes to life again - kū shù shēng huā