Zhu Huaijin
Yu Zhu Huaijin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ū zh ū Hu á ij ī n, which means to be an official. From "Fa Yan Xue Xing".
Analysis of Idioms
It's a long way to go
The origin of Idioms
Han Yangxiong's FA Yan Xue Xing: "the happiness of Zhu Huaijin is not as good as that of Yan's son. The joy of Yan's son is internal, and that of Zhu Huaijin is external. "
Idiom usage
To be a senior official. In the preface to biography of officials in the book of the later Han Dynasty, it is said that "Ruofu's high officials have long swords, and those who flatter Zhu Huaijin are all over the palace." In Song Dynasty, Zhang Xiaoxiang's yuezhaiji: "Zhu Huaijin was a senior official who drove a high car and followed the history of his death."
Zhu Huaijin
mount taishan and the north star - tài shān běi dǒu
Travel from the past to the present - xíng gǔ zhì jīn
Look into the present and know the past - chá jīn zhī gǔ
sth. one knows well and can manage with ease - qīng chē shú dào