Late life learning
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w ǎ NSH ē NGH ò uxu é, which means to learn the same skills or knowledge. It comes from Xuanhe Shupu. Volume 15. Cursive script 3. Jin Yu Yi.
Notes on Idioms
Learning: learning skills and learning. It generally refers to the younger generation who learn the same skills or knowledge.
The origin of Idioms
Xuanhe Shupu. Volume 15. Cursive script 3. Jin Yu Yi: "it is Zhiyi's book. It's self transcendent. It was pushed by the famous calligraphers of that day. It's self conceited and self exalted. If it were, it would not be pursued by later generations. 」
Idiom usage
Examples
In the biography of Chen Shu and Lu Yu by Yao Silian of Tang Dynasty, it is said that "Liang's room is in disorder, the world is boiling, the history of books is incomplete, the rites and music collapse, the late life, the bandits have no walls, the drow is out of the group, just a person."
Zhao Ji of the Song Dynasty wrote in Xuanhe Shupu · caoshu San · Yu Yi: "Yu Yi was promoted by the famous calligraphers of that day, and his self-esteem was also high. If it were, his income would not be pursued by his later generations."
Late life learning
Old but not dead is a thief - lǎo ér bù sǐ shì wéi zéi
harmony between husband and wife - sè tiáo qín nòng