wise emperors
Sheng Di Ming Wang, a Chinese idiom, whose pinyin is sh è NGD ì m í NGW á ng, originally refers to the emperor with excellent moral intelligence in ancient times. It's from Dr. Taichang who moved books by Liu Xin of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Liu Xin of Han Dynasty said in his book Dr. Taichang: "in the Han Dynasty, it's far away from the Emperor Ming, and the way of Zhongni is unique, so there's nothing to follow."
Idiom usage
It is used as subject, object and attributive. It is used as an example for emperors, loyal officials and martyrs since ancient times. Lu Zhi, Tang Dynasty
wise emperors
strike a proper balance between work and rest - láo yì jié hé
do a thing hurriedly at the last moment - lín zhèn mó dāo
be in the right and self-confident - lǐ zhí qì zhuàng
push one 's way by shoving or humping - héng chōng zhí zhuàng