The ring of color
Abstinence from lust, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Z à is è zh à Ji è, meaning abstinence from lust. From the Analects of Confucius Ji Shi
The origin of Idioms
It is said in the Analects of Confucius, Ji Shi: "when you are young, your blood is not determined, but you should give up the color."
Idioms and allusions
Confucius said: "a gentleman has three precepts: when he is young, his blood is uncertain, and his precepts are in color; when he is strong, his blood is just, and his precepts are in fight; when he is old, his blood is weak, and his precepts are in gain." Confucius said: "there are three things a gentleman should be warned about: when he is young, his blood is not mature, so he should give up his infatuation with women; when he is mature, he should give up fighting with others; when he is old, his blood is weak, so he should give up greed."
Discrimination of words
Related idioms: the ring of the past, the ring of the past, the ring of the future, the ring of the frost, the ring of the house, the ring of the present
The ring of color
remember what is right at the sight of profit - jū lì sī yì
intensive and meticulous farming - jīng gēng xì zuò
toil for a living in one 's old age - lǎo cán zuò jiǎn
Buying cattle and selling Swords - mǎi niú mài jiàn
display only a small part of one 's talent - xiǎo shì fēng máng