a family of scholar
Scholarly family, Chinese idiom, pronounced sh ū Xi ā NGM é nd ì, used to refer to the family of scholars, generally refers to a good family background. From Wen Kang's biography of heroes and heroines. Book: three generations of family are familiar with four books and five classics. Incense: there are ancestral temples in the family, and they have their own incense. Door: door when, generally refers to the threshold, on behalf of the local family status. Section: represents section and. It means that there are famous people all over the city in the family.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] Shidai Shuxiang, shuxiangmen antonym] pengmenhu
The origin of Idioms
The 40th chapter of biography of children heroes written by Wen Kang of Qing Dynasty: "now that the scholarly family is going on, the career of clothing and food is reliable, and his son only works step by step and becomes the Minister of state."
Idiom usage
It's formal; it's object; it's commendatory. Every day she thinks that she was born in ~, that her brother is a man, but he fell into the hands of thieves, which is enough to lose her ancestors. Yao xueyin's Li Zicheng, Vol.1, Chapter 17
a family of scholar
versed neither in polite letters nor in military arts - bù wén bù wǔ
Iron bars are ground into needles - tiě bàng mó chéng zhēn
One's reputation is distinguished. - zī shēng wàng zhòng
Fear the dragon before, fear the tiger after - qián pà lóng,hòu pà hǔ