Wenzi Tongsheng
Wenzi Tongsheng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is w é NZ ǐ t ó ngsh ē ng, which means that servants and masters live together in official positions. It comes from the Analects of Confucius.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Xianwen: "the official of Gongshu Wenzi and Wenzi were promoted to the rank of Zhugong. When he heard of it, he said, "it can be written."
Idiom usage
In Li Yu's naihetian Zhubian of Qing Dynasty, it is said that "not only the family is in charge of the body, but also you are good. You can't do without imitating the front emblem and acting with Yixing and serving the public."
Chinese PinYin : wén zǐ tóng shēng
Wenzi Tongsheng
with little selfishness and desire. shǎo sī guǎ yù
We are anxious about gain and loss. guī dé guǐ shī
have a good opinion of oneself. zì shì shèn gāo