Joy in the mulberry
Sangzhongzhixi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ā ngzh ō ngzh ī x ǐ, which means the combination of men and women who do not follow the etiquette and law. From Zuo Zhuan, the second year of Chenggong.
The origin of Idioms
In Zuo Zhuan, the second year of Chenggong, written by Zuo Qiuming in the spring and Autumn period, "Uncle Shen knelt down to his father, and when he met him, he said," what a difference! The master is afraid of the three armed forces, but he is also happy in the middle of the mulberry tree. He should take away those who steal their wives. "
Idiom usage
It's not a loser. It's a good man. It's a good man. It's a good man. It's a good man. It's a good man. The fourth and sixth chapters of Hua Yue Chen
Joy in the mulberry
seek after glory by selling out one 's own country - mài guó qiú lì
be toughened and hardened into steel - bǎi liàn chéng gāng