Youyou Hanyong
Youyouhanyong, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ō uy ó uh á NY ǒ ng, which means to seek calmly and deeply. It comes from the Analects of Confucius · Weizheng written by Lu konqiu in the spring and Autumn period.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, written by Lu kongqiu in the spring and Autumn period, Zhu Xi quoted Hu as saying: "the sage said this to show that scholars should be self-contained and should not wait to advance." Yang Shuda
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing. Example: in the book of Ji Wei Ju primary school, Shulin, review the old and know the new: "the man who says" review the old and know the new "first reviews the old and then knows the new. You can swim in your old career, but new knowledge will suddenly flow
Youyou Hanyong
Wind from tiger, cloud from dragon - fēng cóng hǔ,yún cóng lóng
Never forget the past, the teacher of the future - qián shì bù wàng,hòu shì zhī shī
give sb. the chance to make the best of his abilities - fàng lóng rù hǎi
unable to distinguish black from white - bù fēn zào bái