Idioms, poems, or ancient prose with the word "jian" that have a moral meaning

build a high house

build: pour water, splash water; 瓓: a bottle to hold water. Pour the water from the bottle from the top of the building. It is a metaphor for being condescending and unstoppable. The same as "building from a high position".

To establish a meritorious service

Jian: establishment; merit: meritorious deeds; karma: career. Establish meritorious deeds and achieve great things.

Source from "Shang Liang Shu" by Su Shi of the Song Dynasty: "The ancient sages made great contributions, made profits and defended against dangers. As for the small things, they were all worthwhile." Example: He studied military books assiduously and practiced martial arts seriously. , preparing to make contributions to the motherland

Zuo Jianwaiyi

Explanation: Use unfair means to establish authority and change laws. Source: "Historical Records·Biographies of Lord Shang": "Now the king has Zuo Jian Wai Yi, which is not what he taught." Sima Zhensuo Yin: "Zuo Jian means establishing authority with the left way; Wai Yi means external revolution Yi Jun's order "Yes." Wang Boxiang's note: "Zuo means wrong, and outer means wrong. The story is called 'left way', also called 'outside way'. Usage: as a predicate, attributive; used in written language

Preparing and building strategies

Explain the planning situation and formulate combat strategies. Source: "Book of Sui·Li Delin's Biography": "Planning and building strategies leads to the underworld. Those who obey orders will be safe, and those who disobey orders will be in trouble." "Example" "~~, access to the underworld, those who obey the orders will be safe, and those who disobey the orders will be in trouble." ""Sui Shu" Usage as predicate, attributive, object; used for doing things

Xuan 闼 Jianduo

Pinyin xuán táo jiàn duó Explanation means to listen to the opinions of the subjects. The source is from "Huainan" "Zi·Fan Lun Xun": "In the time of Yu, people listened to the five tones, hung bells, drums, chimes, and set up wooden traps to wait for the people from all directions. The title is: He who teaches the poor to follow the Way beats the drum; he who instructs the poor to be righteous strikes the bell; he who tells the poor to do things shakes up the priest; he who talks to the poor to express sorrow beats the chime; he who teaches the poor to be prosecuted shakes the chime. " Feng Guifen of the Qing Dynasty, "Preface to "Protest of Xiaobinlu": "Looking at today's admonitions and edicts for the establishment of special officials, the people are not able to live in seclusion, but we now know that the sage established a priest and the common people preached the law and was good. " "Yuan" by Chen Chi of the Qing Dynasty: "The law of the Western Taiyuan is based on the ancient people's establishment of priests, which is the legacy of Lu Shi Dangzheng." " The preface to Feng Guifen's "Xiaoxilu Protest" of the Qing Dynasty: "The people have not been able to reach high levels, and only then do they know the sage ~ The law passed down by the common people is good. ”

Idiom story: During the reign of Dayu, he installed five musical instruments, namely bells, drums, chimes, duos, and harpoons, near his residence, and stipulated how the sages from all over the world should use them: preachers would play drums, and those who gave edicts would play the drums. He would ring the bell, ring the chime when he was complaining, and shake the chime when he was worried. So Dayu listened to these five sounds and dealt with them.

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The explanation is a metaphor for an extremely smooth and unstoppable situation. It comes from the seventh volume of "Shengwu Ji" written by Wei Yuan in the Qing Dynasty: "From the middle peak of the Xiling Mountains to Geer Cliff, there is a real potential to break the bamboo and build a bridge." ” We have formed a strong momentum and victory is in sight.

Used as an attributive; referring to an unstoppable trend