popular support
Praise carries the road, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is s ø ngsh ē ngz ǎ ID à o, which means that the sound of praise is full of road; many praise. From the annals of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
The sound of praise fills the road. There are many praises.
The origin of Idioms
1. The 86th chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty written by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "the king of Wei returned to Qi from the Zhou Dynasty, praising and praising all the way, all of them are called virtuous."
2. The 34th chapter of Li Baojia's officialdom in the Qing Dynasty: "not only the people of Shanxi are praising, but also the officials of Shanxi, from below the governor, are grateful to him."
3. Li Liejun's "revolution of 1911 and the period of governor of Jiangxi Province · revolution of 1911" said: "the chamber of Commerce was invited to send people together to restore the Lord's claim, which was in good order and praised for a while."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
popular support
injure the public interest to benefit one 's private interest - sǔn gōng féi sī