Respect and sincerity
Zhu Jing Cun Cheng, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is zh ǔ J ì NGC ú NCH é ng, which means to abide by sincerity and respect. The song Confucianists took this as the foundation of the law body. From Yi Qian.
The origin of Idioms
Yi · Qian: "leisure evil keeps sincerity."
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing. example in the book of rites, Shaoyi: "the guests respect, the sacrifices respect." Ancient sages, caution and fear, observe the nature of Yi people. Wang Ding's preface to Zhu Ziyuan's recent thoughts and the 90th chapter of Qiludeng in Qing Dynasty: "I'm old and have no success now. Although I've been paid tribute, I'm only a year-old tribute leader. My son is an ordinary scholar. Do you dare to be respectful and sincere, learn some Neo Confucianism words, disgust people face to face, and make people laugh at pedantry behind their back? 」
Respect and sincerity
beat drums and clang gongs -- in + battle - jī gǔ míng jīn
willing to sacrifice life in case of danger - jiàn wēi shòu mìng
kindly in appearance but unfathomable at heart - hòu mào shēn cí