Home for the country
Yu Jia Wei Guo, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is y ú Ji ā w é IGU ó, meaning for the country and the people. It comes from he Yuanxiao by Wu Mingshi of Ming Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
For the country, for the people.
The origin of Idioms
The first fold of "Celebrating the Lantern Festival" written by Wu Mingshi in Ming Dynasty: "upright and selfless, with the highest spirit, he is in charge of the Scriptures and volumes to protect the country and the common people, to pray for sunshine and rain."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Examples
The second fold of Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's four horses to Tang Dynasty: "according to the Marshal's ability to help the world, we should be generous, and we should break the saint's worries."
Home for the country
make big investment for small returns - suí zhū tán què
seek far and neglect what lies close at hand - shě jìn jí yuǎn
well-known throughout the country - míng gāo tiān xià
the three parties concerned confront in court - sān cáo duì àn