koinonia
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t ó NGX ī NH é y ì, meaning the same mind. With "one heart and one mind". It comes from the biography of Wang Mang in the history of Han Dynasty.
Analysis of Idioms
One heart, one mind, one heart
The origin of Idioms
According to the biography of Wang Mang in the book of Han Dynasty, "the former Emperor appointed the government to the king and abandoned the officials. I have to serve the ancestral temple. Cheng Jia and the king agree with each other."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive.
Examples
The 76th chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue written by Qian Cai of Qing Dynasty: "naturally, those four people are of one mind and all of them are happy. They come all the way to Zhuxian Town."
"The 60th chapter of the outlaws of the Marsh:" Xiao Ke's power today depends on the support of all his brothers. They are of one mind and one spirit. They share the same fate and act for heaven together. 」
"The first moment makes a surprise. Volume 27:" if you don't agree with me, you'll have another one. 」
koinonia
Every man sweeps the snow before his door, never mind the frost on others' tiles - gèrénzìsǎo ménqiánxuě,mòguǎntārén wǎshàngshuāng
walk on hoar-frost and later on solid ice - lǚ shuāng jiān bīng
A hundred footed insect is not stiff until death - bǎi zú zhī chóng,zhì sǐ bù jiāng