Zhu Yu's sycophant
Zhu zhuzhiling is a Chinese idiom. Its pinyin is zh ù Tu ó zh ī n ì ng, which means Zhu Zhuzhi, a guardian of the spring and Autumn period, is a standard and eloquent person. From the Analects of Confucius Yongye.
The origin of Idioms
In the Analects of Confucius, Yongye said, "it's hard to escape from this world that there is the beauty of the Song Dynasty instead of the flattery of Zhu Yu."
Idiom usage
In the biography of Wang Chen in the book of Jin: "to be a hermit, to be a sycophant." "Confucius was born on the weekend, praising the uprightness of the fish in history, hating the flattery of the fish in history, and thinking about the lack of literature in history, which is called the admonition of the Duke of Zhou."
Zhu Yu's sycophant
As long as you work hard, you can grind an iron pestle into a needle - zhǐ yào gōng fū shēn,tiě chǔ mó chéng zhēn
a fast job done by a straightforward person - kuài rén kuài shì