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Idioms and poems related to filial piety
1, the calf loves it.

Pinyin: shdúqíng shn n

Moral: The old cow licks the fur of the calf to show her deep love for the calf. A metaphor for a person's beloved son is also a metaphor for his deep feelings for his children.

Source: Sima Qian's Biography of Yang Biao in the Later Han Dynasty: "I still cherish the feelings of the old calf."

Like the love of an old cow licking the hair of a young cow.

2. Every grass and tree is spring.

Pronunciation: cù n cù m: o ch ū n hu: and

Moral: It is the grass's meager mind, which can't repay the deep affection of the spring sunshine, which means that the parents' kindness is heavy and difficult to repay.

Source: Meng Jiao's "Wandering Son" in the Tang Dynasty: "There is only a little affection for long grass, and I have three rays of spring."

Who says that a son's tender heart like grass can repay his mother's love like spring?

3. Health and death

Pinyin: y m ng sh ē ng s ò ng s ǐ

Meaning: Let children support their parents before they die and bury them after they die.

Said by: Mencius in the Warring States Period, "Under Mencius Li Lou": "Being born is a major event, and death can be a major event."

Supporting parents is not a big deal, only burial after death is a big deal.

4, maternal love has nothing to report, and life requirements are higher! ?

Source: Li Shangyin's Sending Mother Home in the Tang Dynasty

Mother cannot repay her kindness. Can she pursue other things in life?

5. I can't bear to disassemble the heavy seam, and there are old line marks on it.

Source: Zhou Shouchang basked in old clothes in Qing Dynasty

I want to mend it again, but I can't bear to open my old clothes easily. There are traces of mother's repair on it.