Yuan an Gao wo
Yuan an Gao Wo, a Chinese idiom, is Yu á n ā ng ā owॸin Pinyin, which means to stick to moral integrity in poverty. It comes from the biography of yuan an in the later Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
The biography of yuan an in the later Han Dynasty is quoted by Li Xian in the Tang Dynasty as the biography of the sages of Runan. It is recorded that before yuan an arrived in the Han Dynasty, there was heavy snow in Luoyang, so many people begged for food, and an Du couldn't get up. The order of Luoyang was to go to anmen and see the sages. It was called filial piety and incorruption, except for the order of Yin Pingchang and Ren chengling.
Idiom usage
Yuan an was too poor to live in, but Dang Wei was not happy. A unique way to eliminate cold by Liu Yazi
Yuan an Gao wo
an orphan-calf injures the nursing cow -- ingratitude - gū dú chù rǔ
be anxious to finish off the enemy immediately - miè cǐ zhāo shí
tower above the rest in height of intellect - yòu rán jú shǒu
time slips away fast and the year is approaching its end - jí yǐng diāo nián