appoint people on their merit
Yewuyiexian, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ě w ú y í Xi á n, which means that all talented people are appointed. It means to appoint people on the basis of their talents. From the book of history Dayu desert.
Idiom explanation
Wild: refers to the people outside the imperial court; legacy: omitted.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of history, dayumo said, "the words of Jiayan are wanyoufu, the wild have no heroes, and all nations are Xianning."
Idiom usage
It refers to cherishing talents. example it can be said that there is no fortunate position in the imperial court, and there is no immortal in the wild. Jiao Hong's "Yu Tang Cong Yu · Jian Ju" and "Chen Shu · Gao Zu Ji Shang" in the Ming Dynasty: "there are many gentlemen in the dynasty, but there are no heroes in the wild." Lin Mengchu of Ming Dynasty, Volume 29 of his book "the first time to make a case is amazing." so there are no heroes left behind by the wild, no talents hidden, and the world can make the best use of them. "
appoint people on their merit
Promoting the good and dethroning the evil - jìn xián chù è
relatives from the various branches of the family - zhū qīn liù juàn