live in rich and seclusion
Zhong dingshanlin, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ō NGD ǐ ngsh ā NL í n, which means to compare wealth and seclusion. It comes from "Linjiang fairy: return to Fuliang, the younger brother of Zaiyun Songyou.".
The origin of Idioms
Xin Qiji of Song Dynasty wrote the poem "linjiangxian: send you's younger brother back to Fuliang with rhyme again": "zhongdingshan forest is a dream, and the world's favor and disgrace will not be startled."
Idiom usage
It can be used as an object or attribute; it can be used as a written word with commendatory meaning. An example of song Zhang Shinan's "Huan Huan Ji Wen" Volume 1: "rain Wutong, micro Cloud River Han, Zhong Ding mountain forest infinite sorrow." Lu You's poem "self chanting" in Song Dynasty: "both of them are not successful, and there are not many fame and official positions."
live in rich and seclusion
go with head high and chest out - áng shǒu tǐng xiōng
the footprints leading to a certain point and from these onwards the traces left behind - lái zōng qù jì
check erroneous ideas at the outset - fáng wēi dù jiàn
What you say comes with what you say - yán chū huò suí