Lord, saint and Minister
Zhu Sheng Chen Liang is a Chinese idiom, and its pronunciation is zh ǔ sh è ngch é NLI á ng, which means that the monarch is sage and his subordinates are loyal.
interpretation
The monarch is wise and the subordinates are loyal. Metaphors work better than others. It is also called "Zhu Ming Chen Zhi", "Zhu Sheng Chen Zhi", "Zhu Xian Chen Liang".
source
According to the biography of Zhong Fang in northern history, "Kuang Zhusheng Chenliang, a powerful army and a rich country, Chen zhuhun is superior to others, and people are inferior to others. They are not the masters of the nine kingdoms. They are the only barbarians in this island, but the only ones in heaven."
usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in writing.
Discrimination
Synonyms: Zhu Xian Chen Liang, Zhu Ming Chen Zhi
Lord, saint and Minister
release a tiger to protect oneself -- to bring trouble on oneself while attempting to avoid it with other means - yǐn hǔ zì wèi