forethoughtfully
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu ā nm ó uyu ǎ NL ü è, which means far sighted. It comes from the Song Dynasty Zeng Gong's Zhazi of calling and sentencing the upper Hall of Taichang temple in Fuzhou.
The origin of Idioms
Song zenggong's "Zhazi, summoned and sentenced from Fuzhou to the upper Hall of Taichang Temple" said: "his profound and far-reaching strategy must be based on several things." Yue Fei of Song Dynasty wrote in his notes on painting and guarding the camp fields of Xiangyang and other counties: "Your Majesty is far sighted and far sighted.
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing
forethoughtfully
Sit on the fishing boat in spite of the storm - rèn píng fēng làng qǐ,wěn zuò diào yú chuán
Rhinoceros horned candle monster - xī jiǎo zhú guài
a cicada 's head and a moth 's eyebrows -- a beautiful woman - qín shǒu ér méi
the continuation is only held by a silken thread - bù jué rú lǚ
know without consulting an oracle - wèi bǔ xiān zhī