be of one heart and one mind
Tongde Tongxin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó NGD é t ó NGX ī n, which means that the thoughts and actions are identical. It comes from the biography of Ma Sui in the old book of Tang Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
One heart, one mind
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Ma Sui in the old book of the Tang Dynasty, "the Great Wall is pressing down on the border, and the huge ships are helping Sichuan. They share the same virtues and support the crisis." In the first chapter of cold swallow in Pingshan written by Luo Guanzhong of Ming Dynasty, it can be seen that the monarch and his officials share the same virtue
Idiom usage
It refers to the unity of thought. examples Pu advised the Chinese people not to divide themselves, to be united in virtue, and to form their own groups. Hong Jianyuan's "alarm yellow bell" in Qing Dynasty
be of one heart and one mind
pretending to be what one is not - rén mú gǒu yàng
to entertain imaginary or groundless fears - qǐ guó yōu tiān
parade with beautiful dress in broad daylight - yì jǐn zhòu xíng