kindness of one's parents
Wanjizhien, Pinyin is w ǎ NGJ í zh ē n, is a Chinese idiom, which is used to praise the endless kindness of parents in raising their children.
explain
Wang: none, no; Ji: the end. In the old days, it was used to praise the endless kindness of parents in raising their children.
source
"The book of songs · Xiaoya · Polygonum zedoary": "my father begets me, my mother bows me. They feed me, grow me, nurture me, take care of me, recover me, go in and out of me. If you want to repay your virtue, you will lose your power Chen Zi'ang's stele of Shiyang mansion, governor of Zizi, the ancient court official of the Tang Dynasty: "Burmese and Uighur are indifferent to their kindness, thinking of the way of worshipping Yongxi"
Examples
Quan Zuwang of the Qing Dynasty wrote in the book of Li Liefu Su: "it's because a filial son serves his parents and ignores his extreme kindness. As for a great event, what's his husband's grudge."
kindness of one's parents
Advance the virtuous and retreat the sycophant - jìn xián tuì nìng
overlook sb . 's shortcomings and make much of his merits - shě duǎn qǔ cháng