Famous Chinese sayings:
1. It is like discussing with each other, like polishing. (The Book of Songs)
2. Those who speak are not guilty, but those who hear are warned. (The Book of Songs)
3. Stones from other mountains can attack jade. (The Book of Songs)
4. Give me a peach and repay me with a plum. ("The Book of Songs")
5. There is no beginning for failure, and there is an end for failure. (The Book of Songs)
6. Take a long breath to cover your tears, mourning the hardships of people's lives. (Qu Yuan's "Li Sao")
7. The road is long and long, and I will search up and down. (Qu Yuan's "Li Sao")
8. If I cannot change my mind and follow the vulgar ways, I will be miserable and end up poor. (Qu Yuan's "She Jiang")
9. A ruler is shorter and an inch is longer. ("Songs of Chu")
10. I have a good heart, and even though I died nine times, I still have no regrets. (Chu Ci's "Li Sao")
11. The music is high and the harmony is low. (Song Yu's "Asking the King of Chu")
12. Fullness will cause losses, but modesty will benefit. ("Shang Shu")
13. If you want to accuse someone, there is no reason to hesitate. ("Zuo Zhuan")
14. People are not sages, how can they have no faults? If you can change your past, there is no greater good. ("Zuo Zhuan")
15. The auxiliary car depends on each other, and the lips are dead and the teeth are cold. ("Zuo Zhuan")
16. The force of the warrior restrains all the countries, but the woman is temporarily exempted from the countries. ("Zuo Zhuan")
17. Never forgetting the past is the guide for the future. ("Warring States Policy")
18. It is not too late to make up for the situation after it has been lost. ("Warring States Policy")
19. Know yourself and the enemy, and you can fight a hundred battles without danger. ("The Art of War")
20. A journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step. ("Laozi")
21. Misfortunes lie on the back of blessings, and blessings lie on the backs of misfortunes. ("Laozi")
22. The heavenly net is vast, sparse but not leaking. ("Laozi")
23. He who knows others is wise, and he who knows himself is wise. ("Laozi")
24. Birds of a feather flock together, and people divide into groups. ("Book of Changes")
25. If a worker wants to do his job well, he must first sharpen his tools. (The Analects of Confucius)
26. You cannot admonish those who have gone by, but you can still pursue those who have come. ("The Analects of Confucius")