Start: refers to the beginning of a thing.
Order: good intentions.
This sentence advises people to finish what they started. It is good to pay attention to and concentrate on everything at the beginning, but it is even more valuable to keep the same serious attitude as at the beginning and stick to it at the end.
Source: from thousands of words.
Honesty begins and prudence ends. Honor is built on nothingness.
(Note dǔ): Loyalty and honesty. What: Shanda.
It is good to cultivate one's self-cultivation and pay attention to the beginning, but it is more important to do it seriously and have a good result. This is the foundation of lifelong honor. With this foundation, there is no end to development.
Shuo Wen Jie Zi, compiled by Wang and annotated by Sun, divides Shuo Wen Jie Zi into four parts, which are called four chapters.
From the first sentence "Heaven and Earth are mysterious and yellow" to the thirty-sixth sentence "Lai Yu" as the first part;
From the thirty-seventh sentence "cover this body hair" to the one hundred and second sentence "a good knight is complacent" as the second part;
The third part is from the sentence 103 "Du Yi Huaxia" to the sentence 162 "Cave".
The fourth part is from the sentence 163 "Cure the problems in agriculture" to the sentence 248 "Ignorance".
Finally, there are two sentences, "how about predicate auxiliary words?" , no special meaning, listed separately.
The full text consists of four sentences, which are neat, clear and brilliant. Qian Wen Zi is an influential children's enlightenment book in China. It has simple sentences and is easy to recite and remember, and has been translated into English, French, Latin and Italian.
Refer to Baidu Encyclopedia-Thousand-character Text (one of the three major reading materials of traditional Mongolian studies in China).