mere scholar
Yijieshusheng is a Chinese idiom. Pinyin is y ī Ji è sh ū sh ē ng, which is a self styled or elegant name for ordinary scholars in the old days. From the farewell preface to Tengwang Pavilion in Hongzhou in autumn.
The origin of Idioms
Wang Bo of Tang Dynasty wrote farewell preface to Tengwang Pavilion in Hongzhou in autumn: "Bo, three feet, a scholar."
Analysis of Idioms
A Confucian scholar
Idiom usage
As an object or attribute; as a modest word. A scholar is also called a scholar. Of course, it's a name to be proud of. For example, "to be a scholar" and "to be a scholar" all mean lofty. On scholar's sour Qi by Zhu Ziqing and the romance of Hong Xiuquan by Huang Shizhong in Qing Dynasty: "Shi Dakai is an ancient figure. As a scholar, he is known as a general by throwing a pen. He is able to cross several provinces, and he is not the leader. " Wang Huo's "war and man" (1) Volume 4: "I have no strength to bind a chicken, a scholar, and no troops.
mere scholar
open one 's heart wide and lay bare one 's thoughts - tǔ dǎn qīng xīn
be so dark that nothing is discernible - hēi tiān mō dì
There's no one left here, there's a place to stay - cǐ chǔ bù liú rén,zì yǒu liú rén chǔ