Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - Excerpts of material on civilized manners

Excerpts of material on civilized manners

Excerpts from the material on civilized manners

Excerpts from the material on civilized manners, Manners delight those who are polite, and those who are treated with politeness, and politeness is the first great thing to which children and young people ought to be particularly careful in forming habits, and the following are extracts from the material on civilized manners.

The following is an excerpt from the material on civilized manners1

1. --Mengzi

2, will not be proud, proud of the loss of etiquette, the loss of etiquette, people away, people away from the rebellion. --Zhuge Liang

3, Politeness is the second sun of the cultured 'man.' --Heraclitus

4. Politeness is often a substitute for the noblest emotions. --Mérimée

5. Politeness is like an air cushion, which has nothing in it, but wonderfully reduces bumps. --Johnson

6. A man without manners is like a house without windows. --Uyghur Proverb

7. A man with courtesy is at peace, without courtesy he is in danger. -- The Book of Rites

9. If the country is polite, the country will prosper; if the family is polite, the family will be big; if the body is polite, the body will be repaired; if the heart is polite, the heart will be tai. Yan Yuan

10, courteous manners, mainly a manifestation of self-restraint. --US. Edison

11, courtesy is the first thing that children and young people should be especially careful to develop habits. --E. Locke

12. A man of good will has no difficulty in expressing his politeness to others. --F. Rousseau

13. Politeness pleases those who are polite and those who are treated with politeness. --Fa. Mendes

14, Politeness and circumspection cost nothing, but are worth more than anything else. --Spain. Cervantes

15. There are two kinds of peaceful violence, and they are law and courtesy. --De. Goethe

Extracts from the material of civilization and manners 2

1. Politeness makes the golden key to mankind's *** place.

2. Do not suffer from the disrespect of position, but from the lack of respect for virtue; do not be ashamed of the unappetizing of the Locke, but of the unobtainable of the intellect.

3. Those who are extravagant and inert are poor, while those who are forceful and thrifty are rich.

4. A gentleman is a man of many desires, but he is a man of many desires, but he is a man of many desires.

5, the gentleman's behavior, quiet to cultivate the body, frugality to cultivate virtue, not indifferent to the will, not serene to the far.

6. Feelings have great inspirational power, so it is an important prerequisite for all moral behavior.

7. ****productivism is not only manifested in the fields and sweaty factories, it is also manifested in the family, around the dinner table, among relatives, and in mutual relations.

8, the speech is imposing, may not be the words.

9, quiet to cultivate the body, frugal to improve morality.