mutual sympathy
Chinese idioms, Pinyin is t ò ngy ǎ ngxi ā nggu ā n, which means to describe the close relationship between each other. From the collection of jade halls by Yang Shicong of Ming Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
Yang Shicong of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the collection of jade halls: "the outside is the governor, and the inside is the Ministry. There is no moment that is not related to each other. If the memorials can't reach, it's not the best way to communicate with each other."
Idiom usage
Subject predicate; as predicate and attributive; description is closely related to each other. When I think of Ji Ru, who has been away for half a year, there is no one who has ever been there since he left the pass. (Chapter 38 of Hua Yue Chen by Wei xiuren in Qing Dynasty)
mutual sympathy
expression of thanks for a host 's hospitality - zuì jiǔ bǎo dé
covered all over with wounds and scars - chuāng yí mǎn mù
Stealing chicken does not eat rice - tōu jī bù zhe shí bǎ mǐ
act recklessly and care for nobody - lüè wú jì dàn