The pronunciation of "a gentleman is magnanimous and magnanimous, but a villain always has a relationship" is: jūn zǐ tǎn dàng dàng, xiǎo rén cháng qī qī.
From "The Analects of Confucius·Shuer", it is a famous saying that people have known since ancient times.
Can be translated as: Confucius believed that a gentleman is open-minded and tolerant of others, while a villain is preoccupied and worried about gains and losses.
Notes
Dang: clearing, washing. Magnanimity: Describes a person who is frank, has no distracting thoughts, and has a peaceful mind.
Qi: the phonetic meaning in ancient times. Conghu, Cong尗, and 嗗 also sound. 戉(yuè), axe. Qi Qi: Describes the sound of constant chopping with an axe.
Extended information:
A gentleman is open-minded, frank and clean in thought, and looks very comfortable and stable in appearance and movement; a villain has too many desires in his heart and a heavy psychological burden, so he often worries and Worry, appearance and movements also appear uneasy, often unable to sit or stand firmly.
A magnanimous person is not disturbed by things, and walks according to circumstances without fear; a concerned person walks about things, looks at things, describes things as haggard, and becomes bad at things.
"A gentleman is magnanimous, but a villain is always worried" is a famous saying that people have known since ancient times. Many people often write this as a banner and hang it in their room to motivate themselves.