Remaining in love
It is a Chinese idiom pronounced y í f ā ngy ú Li è. It refers to the reputation and achievements of Shengde left by predecessors. It comes from Fu Liang of the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, who built the tomb of the king of Chu and yuan for the Duke of Song Dynasty
The idiom lingering love pronounced y í f ā ngy ú Li è is used to explain the reputation and achievements of Shengde left by predecessors. He is from the Southern Dynasty, Song Dynasty, Fu Liang's "building the tomb of the king of Chu and Yuan Dynasty for the Duke of Song Dynasty": "he is still alive, and he has worked hard for hundreds of generations." To learn from the ancient precepts, one should bow to the throne by way of accumulation, and one should take the throne by way of recruitment. It is also enough to attack the emperor's order and report to his majesty. The preface to the portrait of Li Pingzhang written by Yao Sui in Yuan Dynasty is used as object and attribute
Remaining in love
Before the wolf, after the tiger - láng qián hǔ hòu
associate oneself with undesirable elements - tóng liú hé wū
thousands and thousands of words - qiān yán wàn yǔ
each family is provided for and each person is well-fed and well-clothed - rén jǐ jiā zú