A few short stories about honesty and trustworthiness. Honesty means being loyal and upright, consistent in words and deeds, and consistent in appearance and deeds. To be trustworthy means to keep one's word and not to be hypocritical or deceitful. The ancient sayings that have been passed down for thousands of years, such as "Words must be kept true and deeds must bear fruit" and "Once a word is spoken, it is hard to follow it" all vividly express the honesty and trustworthiness of the Chinese nation. In the history of Chinese civilization for thousands of years, people have not only sung praises for the virtue of honesty and trustworthiness, but also worked hard to practice it. Confucius taught his disciples to be honest more than 2,000 years ago. In learning, if you know something, say you know it, and if you don’t know something, say you don’t know it. He believes that this is the correct attitude towards learning. Zengzi was also a very honest and trustworthy person. One time, Zengzi's wife was going to the market, but her son was crying and she had to go. The wife coaxed the child and said, "Don't go. I will come back and kill the pig for you to eat." When she came back from the market, she saw that Zengzi was about to kill the pig, and she quickly stepped forward to stop him. Zengzi said, if you deceive a child, the child will not trust you. With that said, he killed the pig. Zengzi did not deceive his children and cultivated their children's character of trustworthiness. In the last years of the Qin Dynasty, there was a man named Ji Bu who always kept his promises and kept his word. People say, "It is better to get a hundred catties of gold than to get a promise of Jibu." This is the idiom that only with the help of friends can one survive. And if you have faith, you will naturally get it: in the old days, the door of Chinese shops usually had the words "genuine goods at reasonable prices, no deception". Since ancient times, fair transactions, honest hospitality, no fraud, and no counterfeiting have been advocated in the purchase and sale of goods. industry ethics. In contemporary China, the virtue of honesty and trustworthiness has also been carried forward. This virtue is manifested in work and study, which means concentration, conscientiousness, and seeking truth from facts; in dealing with people, it is treating people sincerely and trusting each other; in its attitude towards the country and the collective, it is being law-abiding, loyal and honest. During the Northern and Southern Dynasties, there was a very honest man named Ming Shanbin. When he was a state official, he offended the court by opening a warehouse to help the poor and was dismissed from his official position. One day, seeing that there was no way to open the pot at home, he took the lean cow that his father had left for him and sold it in the market. But when I returned home, I learned from my wife that the cow had suffered from leg disease, so I hurried to the market, found the buyer, explained the situation to him, and took the initiative to refund half of the money. Everyone around was amazed. Idiom: Be sincere and keep the truth: Aim to be sincere and stick to it. Treat each other with sincerity: extremely sincere and loyal. Treat others with sincerity. Sincerely: Describes something very sincere and sincere. Sincerely: Describes something very sincere and sincere. Sincerity: Sincerity and sincerity. Describes being very sincere and sincere towards people. Also means "sincerely". The sincerity of dogs and horses: a metaphor for sincerity. Generally speaking humbly about one's sincerity. Keep your word: Keep your word unchanged. Be true to your word, and be resolute in your deeds: Believe: keep your word; Guo: be decisive and resolute. You must keep your word when you say it, and you must do what you do. Keep your word: Be trustworthy and trustworthy. Commitment to words and deeds: keep your word when you say it, and do what you do. Same as "Be true to your word and be resolute in your deeds." Be true to your words and deeds: you must keep your word and you must do what you do. Same as "Words must be true, actions must bear fruit". Yinuoqiangjin: Nuo: Promise. A promise made is worth a thousand pieces of gold. It is a metaphor for keeping one's word and being very trustworthy. It’s a deal: It’s been said in one sentence and it won’t be changed. A metaphor for keeping your word and never regretting it. A gentleman's words are hard to catch up with (a gentleman's words are like a whip for a fast horse): a metaphor for making a promise and never going back on it. Jiuding: Jiuding: a treasure of ancient countries, said to be cast by Xia Yu. One sentence is worth the weight of nine tripods.