Title: Daoxing
The title is Daoxing, a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is t í m í NGD à ox à ng, which means to refer to a person's surname and disrespect. It comes from the record of renziji written by Zheng Tingyu of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
When you come in for a few days, just call me by my name. What's the matter with me?
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: name and surname
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of Zheng Tingyu's "Ren Zi Ji" in Yuan Dynasty: "this poor disciple asked for money, but he asked for money. What's his name
Idiom explanation
It's just a name. Disrespect refers to disrespect for others.
Title: Daoxing
lively and vigorous flourishes in calligraphy - lóng pán fèng zhù
resist foreign aggression and pacify the interior - rǎng wài ān nèi
study your own daughter properly when finding her a husband. - xiàng nǚ pèi fū
roll up one 's sleeves and raise one 's fists to fight - xuān quán lǒng xiù
burn books and bury the literati in pits - fén diǎn kēng rú