The editor of Huiwan has collected and compiled a selection of four-character life mottos for everyone. If you think they are good, please save them. Let’s take a look together!
1. A sage will lose something if he worries a lot; a fool will gain something if he worries a lot.
2. Life is limited, but knowledge is boundless.
3. The people cannot stand without faith - Confucius
4. Respecting Buddha without wine
5. A hidden life
6 , The tree that hugs each other is born from the smallest grain; the nine-story platform starts from tired soil; a journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step.
7. Seeing the mortal world
8. Staying away from the mortal world
9. There is no bottom to knowledge and no limit to the sea of ??learning.
10. Time flies like an arrow, and the sun and the moon fly like a shuttle
11. If you are young and do not learn, you will be ignorant when you are old.
12. Being sincere is the way of heaven; being sincere is the way of man - Mencius
13. Separation, unity and self-control
14. Hearing Not judging is worse than being ignored.
15. The frog at the bottom of the well - what you see is too small
16. Happy life
17. The four elements of success and fame: one is the weather, the other is the human heart, The third is skills, and the fourth is potential.
18. The body is afraid of not being able to move, and the brain is afraid of not being used.
19. A moth flies into a flame - self-destruction
20. If you hide in the city
21. Good things cannot be lost, evil things cannot last
>22. If you don’t believe, your actions will not be fruitful - Mozi
23. If you don’t see or understand, you won’t be able to do it.
24. Don’t do to others what you don’t want others to do to you.
25. Smart and eager to learn, and not ashamed to ask questions.
26. Right-hand man
27. Glorious life
28. Seeing the mountains and rivers in front of everyone
29. Drinking wine
30. Four elements of life growth: 1. Believe in yourself. 2. Convince yourself. 3. Discover yourself. 4. Conquer yourself.
31. Passing smoke
32. Between mountains and cities
33. Loss