having good faith , virtue and patriotism
Loyalty to the liver, righteousness and courage, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ō NGG ā NY ì D ǎ n, which means loyalty and justice. From the romance of Fengshen.
The origin of Idioms
The second chapter of Xu Zhonglin's Fengshen Yanyi in Ming Dynasty: "prime minister Jinluan admonishes you directly. Who can be loyal and courageous?"
Idiom usage
Be subject, object, attribute; be loyal. Song Xin Qiji's shuidiao Getou is loyal and courageous for thousands of years. It's full of smoke and rain. Don't be surprised to guess the past. Song Dynasty Wang Yuanliang's song of the soul of the Taoist in Fuqiu: "loyalty, righteousness and courage can't be like this. We should keep a good relationship with the world." The third and fifth chapter of Shi Naian's outlaws of the marsh in Ming Dynasty: "gather heroes on the Bank of the river; show loyalty and courage in the downtown." In Ming Dynasty's Wumingshi's "jingzhongji · appreciating spring", it is said that "if the sword is long and polished, who will be the enemy of loyalty, righteousness and courage." The second fold of Ming Dynasty's Wu Mingshi's the coming of all nations: "it means that I am sincere, loyal and courageous, but I am not biased." In the palace of eternal life, scolding thieves, written by Hong Sheng of Qing Dynasty: "although I'm poor at music, I'm dull In this blood, there is some loyalty and courage in the chest. "
having good faith , virtue and patriotism
have an easy control in the matter - zòng héng kāi hé
search for seclusion and beautiful scenery - xún yōu tàn shèng
have an easy control in the matter - cāo zòng zì rú