live a perfect lift
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Qu á NSH ò uqu á NGU ī, which means that feudal ethics believe that people's bodies come from their parents. It comes from the book of rites.
Idiom explanation
Feudal ethics believed that people's body came from their parents, and they should keep clean and love themselves all their lives, and return to the way their parents did when they gave birth to me.
The origin of Idioms
Dai Sheng's book of rites, Jiyi, in the Western Han Dynasty: "parents are born from the whole, and return to the whole. It can be called filial piety."
Idiom usage
I only heard that there was a filial son Zeng Shen in ancient times, and there was no one who damaged his hair. Hong Rengan's the return of Heroes
live a perfect lift
a hundred mouths cannot explain it away - bǎi huì nán biàn
pay attention to one 's own moral uplift without thought of others - dú shàn wú shēn
the principle of friendship will not admit of a refusal - yì bù róng cí
Good heart makes donkey liver and lung - hǎo xīn zuò le lǘ gān fèi