Melting the past and casting the present
Melting the past and casting the present, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is R ó NGG ǔ zh ù J ī n, which means to integrate the ancient and modern knowledge. It comes from Wang Shizhen's "chibei puppet talk · Tanyi 2 · cangming Caiji" in Qing Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Shizhen in the Qing Dynasty wrote "talking about chibei puppets, talking about art II, cangming and Caiji": "to keep the truth, to take the essence, to take the ancestors, to melt the past and cast the present, to be a treasure of the times."
Idiom usage
As an object or attributive, it refers to the integration of ancient and modern knowledge
Melting the past and casting the present
the founder of a religious sect or a school of thought - kāi shān zǔ shī
The crane is long and the duck is short - hè cháng fú duǎn
turn sb . 's trick to one 's own use - jiāng jì jiù jì
stand vividly revealed on the paper - yuè rán zhǐ shàng