unyielding
Ao Shuang Dou Xue, a Chinese idiom, is "Xun Oshu ā NGD ò uxu" in pinyin, which means to be proud of the frost and fight against the snow; it describes being not afraid of the cold; it refers to being in adversity and not yielding. From Master Zhang.
The origin of Idioms
The third discount of Zhang Tianshi by Wu Changling in Yuan Dynasty: "who can match the jade bone and ice muscle, who can be proud of the snow and bully the frost and win the first place."
Idiom usage
Combined; as predicate and attribute; with commendatory meaning.
Chinese PinYin : ào shuāng dòu xuě
unyielding
the widower , the widow , the orphan and the childless. guān guǎ gū qióng
patriotic and loyal to the throne. měi rén xiāng cǎo