Yuanzhen Zehui
Yuanzhen Zehui, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Yu ā NT í ngz é Hu ì, which means to describe the convergence of things. From "Shaoshi Shanfang bicong · Jiuliu introduction".
The origin of Idioms
Hu Yinglin of the Ming Dynasty wrote in the preface of Jiuliu, Shaoshi Shanfang bicong: "in the Han Dynasty, the people of Dong and Jia gradually became mellow and simple. A generation of articles began to return to the ancients. Huainan was also a group of flashy people. The outline of the book was obscene, and it was a collection of profound and profound works. It was compiled for this purpose."
Word usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Yuanzhen Zehui
be reputed and rise up to prosperity - fēi yīng téng mào
without regarding a thousand miles as very distant -- take though it were a thousand miles away - bù yuǎn qiān lǐ
repair the old and utilize the waste - xiū jiù lì fèi