From e8cbe3ba15fd20da5a1ee9c40536a00ba690a0ae Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Derek Yuan <87529592+derekyuan1000@users.noreply.github.com> Date: Mon, 16 Jun 2025 13:43:23 +0100 Subject: [PATCH] impr(quotes): ad 60 Chinese Simplified Quotes (@derekyuan1000) (#6620) ### Description 60 more famous Chinese Simplified Quotes ### Checks - [x] Adding quotes? - [x] Make sure to include translations for the quotes in the description (or another comment) so we can verify their content. Closes # ### Translations: - "Heaven progresses vigorously; a gentleman should persist in self-improvement." - **"id": 241** - "The sea accommodates hundreds of rivers, only with tolerance can one be great." - **"id": 242** - "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." - **"id": 243** - "To learn without thinking is labor lost; to think without learning is dangerous." - **"id": 244** - "A keen learner does not shy away from asking questions." - **"id": 245** - "Those who are content are always happy." - **"id": 246** - "Where there is a will, there is a way." - **"id": 247** - "Read thousands of books and travel thousands of miles." - **"id": 248** - "Do not impose on others what you do not desire for yourself." - **"id": 249** - "The road is long and winding; I will seek diligently." - **"id": 250** - "Without accumulating small steps, one cannot reach a thousand miles." - **"id": 251** - "Knowing others is intelligence; knowing oneself is true wisdom." - **"id": 252** - "Teaching others to seek truth is the essence of education." - **"id": 253** - "Isn't it a joy to have friends come from afar?" - **"id": 254** - "Do not be joyous over material things, nor be sad over personal losses." - **"id": 255** - "When heaven is about to assign a great responsibility to a person, it will first temper their will." - **"id": 256** - "Skill is honed by diligence, while laziness destroys it." - **"id": 257** - "The strength of a horse is known through its endurance; the heart of a person is revealed over time." - **"id": 258** - "Without enduring the bitter cold, how can one smell the fragrant plum blossoms?" - **"id": 259** - "Reading a book a hundred times reveals its meaning." - **"id": 260** - "Lessons from past events serve as guidance for future actions." - **"id": 261** - "Those close to vermilion become red; those close to ink become black." - **"id": 262** - "Dripping water can penetrate stone; a rope saw can cut wood." - **"id": 263** - "Without entering the tiger's den, how can one catch a tiger cub?" - **"id": 264** - "The loss of the old horse might be a blessing." - **"id": 265** - "Peach and plum trees do not speak, yet a path forms beneath them." - **"id": 266** - "Without rules, one cannot achieve a circle or a square." - **"id": 267** - "Everyone has strengths and weaknesses." - **"id": 268** - "Those who understand are not as good as those who love; those who love are not as good as those who find joy." - **"id": 269** - "A gentleman is harmonious yet distinct; a petty person is identical yet disharmonious." - **"id": 270** - "A thousand-mile gift of goose feathers is light in value but heavy in sentiment." - **"id": 271** - "An inch of time is worth an inch of gold, but gold cannot buy an inch of time." - **"id": 272** - "Bitter medicine is good for illness; harsh words are beneficial for action." - **"id": 273** - "A thousand troops are easy to find, but a good general is hard to come by." - **"id": 274** - "It's not the slow pace that is to be feared, but standing still." - **"id": 275** - "From a high pole, one can go further." - **"id": 276** - "A single leaf can block the view of Mount Tai." - **"id": 277** - "Unconsciously, time flows quietly." - **"id": 278** - "Since ancient times, who has not died? Let my loyal heart shine through history." - **"id": 279** - "With a thousand hammers and chisels, one can emerge from the mountains; facing fierce flames is nothing." - **"id": 280** - "Without knowing the true face of Mount Lu, one is limited by being in the mountain." - **"id": 281** - "When one reaches the summit, they can see all the mountains as small." - **"id": 282** - "Fallen petals are not heartless; they turn into spring mud to protect the flowers." - **"id": 283** - "If life were just as it was at first sight, what sorrow would autumn winds bring to painted fans?" - **"id": 284** - "Life is like a dream; let us toast to the moon over the river." - **"id": 285** - "The spring silkworms die only when their silk is exhausted; the wax torch turns to ash only when the tears have dried." - **"id": 286** - "To see a thousand miles ahead, one must climb another floor." - **"id": 287** - "Heaven has given me talent for a purpose; even if I spend a fortune, it will return." - **"id": 288** - "Do not worry about having no friends on the road; who in the world does not know you?" - **"id": 289** - "A thousand sails pass by the sunken boat; a thousand trees bloom in front of the sick tree." - **"id": 290** - "In the midst of mountains and rivers, one may think there is no way; but within the shadows of willows and flowers, there lies another village." - **"id": 291** - "After gathering a hundred flowers to make honey, for whom do you toil and for whom do you sweeten?" - **"id": 292** - "Fallen red clouds fly alongside solitary wild ducks; autumn waters blend with the long sky in one color." - **"id": 293** - "Life is like a journey against the current; I too am a traveler." - **"id": 294** - "In times of joy, one should enjoy thoroughly; do not let the golden cup face the moon empty." - **"id": 295** - "The spring breeze once again greens the southern bank; when will the bright moon shine on my return?" - **"id": 296** - "When one strikes water for three thousand miles, one trusts in life for two hundred years." - **"id": 297** - "If the nation benefits from life or death, how can one avoid fortune or misfortune?" - **"id": 298** - "Life is like a white horse passing through a crack; it is all too sudden." - **"id": 299** - "A thousand-mile dike collapses from an ant's nest." - **"id": 300** - "Without climbing a high mountain, one cannot know the height of heaven; without approaching a deep stream, one cannot know the thickness of earth." - **"id": 301** - "Those who know their insufficiencies are always present." - **"id": 302** - "Reading ten thousand books, writing as if inspired by a divine spirit." - **"id": 303** - "Do not forget your original intention, and you will achieve your goal." - **"id": 304** - "A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step." - **"id": 305** - "Learning has no limits." - **"id": 306** - "Knowing shame leads to courage." - **"id": 307** - "Do not worry about others not knowing you; worry about not knowing others." - **"id": 308** - "One should help others achieve their goals while seeking their own." - **"id": 309** - "To know what is to know, and to not know what is not to know, is knowledge." - **"id": 310** - "Think thrice before acting." - **"id": 311** - "Review the old to learn the new." - **"id": 312** - "To study and practice regularly, is that not a joy?" - **"id": 313** - "Those who know are not as good as those who love." - **"id": 314** - "A keen learner does not shy away from asking questions." - **"id": 315** - "A gentleman is open and relaxed; a petty person is always anxious." - **"id": 316** - "Do not impose on others what you do not desire for yourself." - **"id": 317** - "When three people walk together, there must be a teacher among them." - **"id": 318** - "To study without fatigue, to teach without weariness." - **"id": 319** - "The wise are not confused; the benevolent are not worried; the brave are not afraid." - **"id": 320** - "A gentleman seeks from himself; a petty person seeks from others." - **"id": 321** - "A gentleman helps others to succeed but does not participate in their wrongs." - **"id": 322** - "A gentleman cherishes virtue, while a petty person cherishes land. A gentleman cherishes punishment, while a petty person cherishes favor." - **"id": 323** - "A gentleman understands righteousness; a petty person understands profit." - **"id": 324** - "In the cold of winter, only then do we know the pine and cypress are the last to wither." - **"id": 325** - "Do not worry about lacking a position; worry about how to stand. Do not worry about being unknown; seek to be known." - **"id": 326** - "The wise love water; the benevolent love mountains." - **"id": 327** - "A gentleman is cautious in speech but quick in action." - **"id": 328** - "A gentleman is not a tool." - **"id": 329** - "A gentleman is harmonious yet distinct." - **"id": 330** --- .../static/quotes/chinese_simplified.json | 540 ++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 540 insertions(+) diff --git a/frontend/static/quotes/chinese_simplified.json b/frontend/static/quotes/chinese_simplified.json index a3c251ec9..6fe44b16d 100644 --- a/frontend/static/quotes/chinese_simplified.json +++ b/frontend/static/quotes/chinese_simplified.json @@ -1446,6 +1446,546 @@ "source": "现代诗句", "length": 15, "id": 240 + }, + { + "text": "天行健,君子以自强不息。", + "source": "《易经》", + "length": 12, + "id": 241 + }, + { + "text": "海纳百川,有容乃大。", + "source": "林则徐", + "length": 10, + "id": 242 + }, + { + "text": "千里之行,始于足下。", + "source": "《道德经》", + "length": 10, + "id": 243 + }, + { + "text": "学而不思则罔,思而不学则殆。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 14, + "id": 244 + }, + { + "text": "敏而好学,不耻下问。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 10, + "id": 245 + }, + { + "text": "知足者常乐。", + "source": "《老子》", + "length": 6, + "id": 246 + }, + { + "text": "有志者事竟成。", + "source": "《后汉书》", + "length": 7, + "id": 247 + }, + { + "text": "读万卷书,行万里路。", + "source": "刘彝", + "length": 10, + "id": 248 + }, + { + "text": "己所不欲,勿施于人。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 10, + "id": 249 + }, + { + "text": "路漫漫其修远兮,吾将上下而求索。", + "source": "屈原《离骚》", + "length": 16, + "id": 250 + }, + { + "text": "不积跬步,无以至千里。", + "source": "《荀子·劝学》", + "length": 11, + "id": 251 + }, + { + "text": "知人者智,自知者明。", + "source": "《道德经》", + "length": 10, + "id": 252 + }, + { + "text": "千教万教教人求真,千学万学学做真人。", + "source": "陶行知", + "length": 18, + "id": 253 + }, + { + "text": "有朋自远方来,不亦乐乎。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 12, + "id": 254 + }, + { + "text": "不以物喜,不以己悲。", + "source": "范仲淹", + "length": 10, + "id": 255 + }, + { + "text": "天将降大任于是人也,必先苦其心志。", + "source": "《孟子》", + "length": 17, + "id": 256 + }, + { + "text": "业精于勤荒于嬉,行成于思毁于随。", + "source": "韩愈", + "length": 16, + "id": 257 + }, + { + "text": "路遥知马力,日久见人心。", + "source": "谚语", + "length": 12, + "id": 258 + }, + { + "text": "不经一番寒彻骨,怎得梅花扑鼻香。", + "source": "黄蘖禅师《上堂开示颂》", + "length": 16, + "id": 259 + }, + { + "text": "读书百遍,其义自见。", + "source": "《三国志》", + "length": 10, + "id": 260 + }, + { + "text": "前事不忘,后事之师。", + "source": "《战国策》", + "length": 10, + "id": 261 + }, + { + "text": "近朱者赤,近墨者黑。", + "source": "傅玄", + "length": 10, + "id": 262 + }, + { + "text": "滴水穿石,绳锯木断。", + "source": "谚语", + "length": 10, + "id": 263 + }, + { + "text": "不入虎穴,焉得虎子。", + "source": "《后汉书》", + "length": 10, + "id": 264 + }, + { + "text": "塞翁失马,焉知非福。", + "source": "《淮南子》", + "length": 10, + "id": 265 + }, + { + "text": "桃李不言,下自成蹊。", + "source": "《史记》", + "length": 10, + "id": 266 + }, + { + "text": "不以规矩,不能成方圆。", + "source": "《孟子》", + "length": 11, + "id": 267 + }, + { + "text": "尺有所短,寸有所长。", + "source": "《楚辞》", + "length": 10, + "id": 268 + }, + { + "text": "知之者不如好之者,好之者不如乐之者。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 18, + "id": 269 + }, + { + "text": "君子和而不同,小人同而不和。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 14, + "id": 270 + }, + { + "text": "千里送鹅毛,礼轻情意重。", + "source": "成语", + "length": 12, + "id": 271 + }, + { + "text": "一寸光阴一寸金,寸金难买寸光阴。", + "source": "谚语", + "length": 16, + "id": 272 + }, + { + "text": "良药苦口利于病,忠言逆耳利于行。", + "source": "《孔子家语》", + "length": 16, + "id": 273 + }, + { + "text": "千军易得,一将难求。", + "source": "《三国志》", + "length": 10, + "id": 274 + }, + { + "text": "不怕慢,就怕站。", + "source": "谚语", + "length": 8, + "id": 275 + }, + { + "text": "百尺竿头,更进一步。", + "source": "谚语", + "length": 10, + "id": 276 + }, + { + "text": "一叶障目,不见泰山。", + "source": "成语", + "length": 10, + "id": 277 + }, + { + "text": "不经意间,岁月已悄然流逝。", + "source": "现代格言", + "length": 13, + "id": 278 + }, + { + "text": "人生自古谁无死,留取丹心照汗青。", + "source": "文天祥", + "length": 16, + "id": 279 + }, + { + "text": "千锤万凿出深山,烈火焚烧若等闲。", + "source": "于谦《石灰吟》", + "length": 16, + "id": 280 + }, + { + "text": "不识庐山真面目,只缘身在此山中。", + "source": "苏轼《题西林壁》", + "length": 16, + "id": 281 + }, + { + "text": "会当凌绝顶,一览众山小。", + "source": "杜甫《望岳》", + "length": 12, + "id": 282 + }, + { + "text": "落红不是无情物,化作春泥更护花。", + "source": "龚自珍《己亥杂诗》", + "length": 16, + "id": 283 + }, + { + "text": "人生若只如初见,何事秋风悲画扇。", + "source": "纳兰性德", + "length": 16, + "id": 284 + }, + { + "text": "人生如梦,一尊还酹江月。", + "source": "苏轼《念奴娇·赤壁怀古》", + "length": 12, + "id": 285 + }, + { + "text": "春蚕到死丝方尽,蜡炬成灰泪始干。", + "source": "李商隐《无题》", + "length": 16, + "id": 286 + }, + { + "text": "欲穷千里目,更上一层楼。", + "source": "王之涣《登鹳雀楼》", + "length": 12, + "id": 287 + }, + { + "text": "天生我材必有用,千金散尽还复来。", + "source": "李白《将进酒》", + "length": 16, + "id": 288 + }, + { + "text": "莫愁前路无知己,天下谁人不识君。", + "source": "高适《别董大》", + "length": 16, + "id": 289 + }, + { + "text": "沉舟侧畔千帆过,病树前头万木春。", + "source": "刘禹锡《酬乐天扬州初逢席上见赠》", + "length": 16, + "id": 290 + }, + { + "text": "山重水复疑无路,柳暗花明又一村。", + "source": "陆游《游山西村》", + "length": 16, + "id": 291 + }, + { + "text": "采得百花成蜜后,为谁辛苦为谁甜。", + "source": "罗隐《蜂》", + "length": 16, + "id": 292 + }, + { + "text": "落霞与孤鹜齐飞,秋水共长天一色。", + "source": "王勃《滕王阁序》", + "length": 16, + "id": 293 + }, + { + "text": "人生如逆旅,我亦是行人。", + "source": "苏轼《临江仙》", + "length": 12, + "id": 294 + }, + { + "text": "人生得意须尽欢,莫使金樽空对月。", + "source": "李白《将进酒》", + "length": 16, + "id": 295 + }, + { + "text": "春风又绿江南岸,明月何时照我还。", + "source": "王安石《泊船瓜洲》", + "length": 16, + "id": 296 + }, + { + "text": "会当水击三千里,自信人生二百年。", + "source": "毛泽东《七律·到韶山》", + "length": 16, + "id": 297 + }, + { + "text": "苟利国家生死以,岂因祸福避趋之。", + "source": "林则徐", + "length": 16, + "id": 298 + }, + { + "text": "人生如白驹过隙,忽然而已。", + "source": "《庄子》", + "length": 13, + "id": 299 + }, + { + "text": "千里之堤,溃于蚁穴。", + "source": "《韩非子》", + "length": 10, + "id": 300 + }, + { + "text": "不登高山,不知天之高也;不临深溪,不知地之厚也。", + "source": "《荀子·劝学》", + "length": 24, + "id": 301 + }, + { + "text": "知不足者常有。", + "source": "谚语", + "length": 7, + "id": 302 + }, + { + "text": "读书破万卷,下笔如有神。", + "source": "杜甫《奉赠韦左丞丈二十二韵》", + "length": 12, + "id": 303 + }, + { + "text": "不忘初心,方得始终。", + "source": "《华严经》", + "length": 10, + "id": 304 + }, + { + "text": "千里之行,始于足下。", + "source": "《道德经》", + "length": 10, + "id": 305 + }, + { + "text": "学无止境。", + "source": "谚语", + "length": 5, + "id": 306 + }, + { + "text": "知耻而后勇。", + "source": "《左传》", + "length": 6, + "id": 307 + }, + { + "text": "不患人之不己知,患不知人也。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 14, + "id": 308 + }, + { + "text": "己欲立而立人,己欲达而达人。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 14, + "id": 309 + }, + { + "text": "知之为知之,不知为不知,是知也。", + "source": "孔子", + "length": 16, + "id": 310 + }, + { + "text": "三思而后行。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 6, + "id": 311 + }, + { + "text": "温故而知新。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 6, + "id": 312 + }, + { + "text": "学而时习之,不亦说乎。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 11, + "id": 313 + }, + { + "text": "知之者不如好之者。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 9, + "id": 314 + }, + { + "text": "敏而好学,不耻下问。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 10, + "id": 315 + }, + { + "text": "君子坦荡荡,小人长戚戚。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 12, + "id": 316 + }, + { + "text": "己所不欲,勿施于人。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 10, + "id": 317 + }, + { + "text": "三人行,必有我师焉。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 10, + "id": 318 + }, + { + "text": "学而不厌,诲人不倦。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 10, + "id": 319 + }, + { + "text": "知者不惑,仁者不忧,勇者不惧。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 15, + "id": 320 + }, + { + "text": "君子求诸己,小人求诸人。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 12, + "id": 321 + }, + { + "text": "君子成人之美,不成人之恶。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 13, + "id": 322 + }, + { + "text": "君子怀德,小人怀土。君子怀刑,小人怀惠。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 20, + "id": 323 + }, + { + "text": "君子喻于义,小人喻于利。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 12, + "id": 324 + }, + { + "text": "岁寒,然后知松柏之后凋也。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 13, + "id": 325 + }, + { + "text": "不患无位,患所以立。不患莫己知,求为可知也。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 22, + "id": 326 + }, + { + "text": "知者乐水,仁者乐山。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 10, + "id": 327 + }, + { + "text": "君子欲讷于言而敏于行。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 11, + "id": 328 + }, + { + "text": "君子不器。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 5, + "id": 329 + }, + { + "text": "君子和而不同。", + "source": "《论语》", + "length": 7, + "id": 330 } ] }