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Can you tell me what your motto and life creed are?

"Motto" originally refers to the motto written by the ancients and placed on the right side of the seat, and later refers to the motto that people inspire and alert themselves as a guide to action. Many Chinese and foreign celebrities in history have their own "mottos", which are always worth learning by our cross-century generation.

The motto of Pasteur, a world-renowned infectious disease scientist-will, work and wait-is the cornerstone of the pyramid of success.

Faraday, the founder of modern electromagnetism, his motto is to strive for success, but don't expect success.

The motto of Wan Jin, a famous Canadian scientist and winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine, is: The greatest happiness in life lies not in what you have, but in the process of pursuing what.

The motto of Marx, the great proletarian revolutionary mentor-think about everything.

The motto of the famous French writer Stendhal is that anyone who wants to write in black on plain paper should not be surprised or angry when others call him clumsy.

The motto of the famous French writer Zola-not a day goes by without writing a line.

The motto of Dickens, a famous British writer-don't get carried away.

The motto of Ye Ting, a modern proletarian writer and strategist in China, is: The three armed forces can win the handsome, but the ordinary man can't win the ambition.

The motto of Xu Beihong, an outstanding modern painter in China, is: People should not be proud, but they should not be proud.

The motto of Zhu Guangqian, a famous contemporary aesthetician in China-faithfulness, calmness, honesty and courage.

The motto of Hua, a famous mathematician in China, is: Speak less polite words and more art when meeting.

The motto of Hou, a famous contemporary chemist in China-Diligence can make up for the shortcomings, and diligence can make a career.

Scholar Zhang Naiqi was wrongly classified as "Rightist". He wrote two sentences as his motto and posted them on the wall: "Practice tests truth and time solves problems." This is telling the truth, and later he was rehabilitated.

The motto of the famous painter Guan Shanyue is: "Practice makes perfect is not desirable, and it is often difficult to satisfy." He also engraved these two sentences on his own seal.

Ji Hongchang, a revolutionary martyr, was taught by his father: "Being an official means not getting rich." Ji Hongchang took this sentence as his motto. He also ordered hundreds of rice bowls from the porcelain factory, carved this sentence on the bowl and distributed it to all the soldiers.

Poet and writer Qiao Yu's motto is: "Don't be confused by fashion, don't be covered by habits, and don't be tired of fame and fortune." This "three noes" is not easy to achieve.

The motto of Luo Yusheng, a famous Quyi performing artist, is: "Enjoy yourself, be good at entertainment, be contented and be ready to help others."