indomitable
Indomitable, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin for B ǎ izh é B ù Q ū, means by countless setbacks are not yield, shake, describe strong will. It comes from the book "Zhuo Zhongyi's manuscript".
The origin of Idioms
Yun Jing of the Qing Dynasty wrote after the manuscript of Zhuo Zhongyi: "once it becomes a name, it will be recorded in the history books and county annals. It will not be able to change people's color and feelings thousands of years later. There are people who are unyielding, such as Zhongyi, Fangshi and tieshangshu."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attributive and adverbial to describe firm will. Like the prime minister No matter what you do, you will never give up. Guo Xiaochuan's poem "mourning for the beloved Premier Zhou"
Idiom story
Qiao Xuan, an official of the Eastern Han Dynasty, was dignified and jealous of evil. Once, a gang of robbers tied up his 10-year-old son and brought him into his house to ask Qiao Xuan, who was ill, to redeem him immediately. He was rebuked by Qiao Zhi. Soon, the officers and soldiers surrounded the bridge family. They were afraid that the robbers would kill Qiao Zhi's son, so they didn't dare to do it. At this time, Qiao Xuan yelled angrily: "can I release these bad guys because of my son's life?" Urge the officers and men to start as soon as possible. As a result, Qiao Xuan's son was killed by the robbers. People praised Qiao Xuan for his "perseverance" and his integrity.
Chinese PinYin : bǎi zhé bù qū
indomitable
sign a note for investigation. lì cǐ cún zhào
every family circulates and everyone knows. hù gào rén xiǎo
swaying in the midst of a raging storm. fēng yǔ piāo yáo
The monk can't run away from the temple. pǎo le hé shàng pǎo bù le miào