Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional stories - How to sum up "stick to your principles" with an idiom?
How to sum up "stick to your principles" with an idiom?
Explanation:
1, consistent [sh ǐ zh not ng y and guà n] is the same from beginning to end.
Source: Mao Zedong's "The Tasks of the Chinese Production Party in the War of Resistance against Japanese Aggression Period": "China should not only unite with the Soviet Union, which has always been a good friend of the China people, but also, if possible, ..."
Persistence means never changing your mind.
The biography of Xie An in the Book of Jin: "Although An was sent by the DPRK, the ambition of Dongshan remains unchanged from beginning to end, and everything is in the words."
3, there is a beginning and an end [y ǒ u sh ǐ y 466u zh not ng] has a beginning and an end. Refers to doing things to the end.
4. Perseverance: [jiā n chí bé xiè] slack: slack. Stick to the end and never relax.
5. Perseverance: [Jiān rūn bùbá] describes firm belief, tenacious will and unshakable.
6. Consistent: [y τ y ǐ guà n zh τ] Pass: Pass. Use a fundamental reason to understand the whole story or the whole truth.
Antonym: wavering, giving up halfway, dabbling, falling short.
- Related articles
- China Top Ten Wooden Door Brands Inventory
- Why do guys have Soviet feelings
- What's the telephone number of Ounuo (Tianjin) Printing and Packaging Co., Ltd.?
- What to buy in the UK
- What are the moving companies in Shanghai
- What is the calorie of croquettes?
- What are the traditional festivals in China in summer?
- What patterns will be carved on furniture in Song Dynasty?
- What are the customs, culture, language and traditional habits of Miao people?
- English translation of printing vocabulary, 20 cents a word