If you plant a melon, you get a melon
Planting melon and getting melon, planting beans and getting beans is a Chinese idiom. The Pinyin is zh ø nggu ā D é Gu ā, zh ø NGD ò UD é D ò u, which means
What you plant, what you take. It is originally a Buddhist language, which refers to the relationship between karma and retribution. After the metaphor of what has been done, what kind of results.
Idiom explanation
What you plant, what you take. It is originally a Buddhist language, which refers to the relationship between karma and retribution. After the metaphor of what has been done, what kind of results. In Nirvana Sutra: "if you plant a melon, you get a melon; if you plant a plum, you get a plum." "Lu Yu Ji Cui · Cun Yang" says: "if you plant beans, you must plant beans; if you plant melons, you must plant melons."
Discrimination of words
The review of the past can be used for reference in the future. Zou Taofen's opening remarks since the war of resistance against Japan
If you plant a melon, you get a melon
Break the country and lose the family - pò guó wáng jiā
one 's sidelong glance has the moist gleam of the autumnal waves - qiū bō yíng yíng