A dead man
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is sh ī Ji ū zh ī P í ng, which means that the monarch treats his subjects fairly. It comes from the book of songs, Cao Feng, and the dove.
Analysis of Idioms
The benevolence of a corpse dove
Idiom usage
In the book of the later Han Dynasty, Yuan Shaozhuan: "the only way to make a fool of a courtier is to keep his temper and avoid evil flattery."
The origin of Idioms
According to the book of songs, Cao Feng, Yu Jiu: "Yu Jiu is in sang, and his son is seven." Mao Heng said: "the dove's son, from the top down in the morning, from the bottom up in the evening, the average is the same."
A dead man
the grasses are tall and the nightingales are in the air - cǎo zhǎng yīng fēi
a benevolent and kind countenance - cí méi shàn mù
look for a noble steed to correspond with the one drawn - àn tú suǒ jì
the four steps in the composition of an essay - qǐ chéng zhuǎn hé
as closely linked as flesh and blood - gǔ ròu xiāng lián