Common ground
Chinese idioms, Pinyin reading t ó NGW é ng ò nggu ǐ, refers to national unity. It's from Xiao Puqi's form of giving way.
Idiom explanation
Common ground
Also known as "tongwentonggui". "The book of rites · the doctrine of the mean": "today I get off on the same track, write the same text, and practice the same ethics." Later, he used the metaphor of "common culture and common track" to describe the unification of the country.
Interpretation: Text: text. The train track is unified and the words are consistent. The metaphor is unified and consistent.
Idioms and allusions
From: the third part of Xiao Puqi rang Feng Biao written by Liang Jiangyan in the Southern Dynasty: "in the past, Chu pianjun, Yan Ying Xiaozheng, who was in charge of the state of Zhu, was not yet lightly granted, Kuang Che GUI official documents, Siming tongzhai."
Common ground
To drive fish for the deep, to drive nobility for the Cong - wèi yuān qū yú,wèi cóng qū jué