that 's final
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is B à NSH à NGD à NGD à ng, which means that things have been decided, can not be changed or things have become a fact. It comes from the lamp on the wrong road by Li Lvyuan in Qing Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
Nailing: nailing, originally refers to nailing on the stone. It means that things have been decided and cannot be changed. Not too much about it & lt; the dieiscast. & gt;
The origin of Idioms
The ninety third chapter of "the lamp on the wrong road" written by Li Lvyuan in the Qing Dynasty: "the three elders, together with my son's father, agreed to discuss the matter of marriage. Then they should nail the stone board, just as my father ordered."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: firm and firm; antonym: faithless
Idiom usage
An attribute; a metaphor for a settled thing. Example Wang Shuo's I'm a wolf: "all of us can do something. You're the only one who can't do anything." Wang Meng's Butterfly: "Hai Yun is a class enemy who has been determined and has made a firm and formal conclusion." Shan Xuepeng's Qiao Ge'er: "it's a certainty. I'll take care of this marriage." It is also called "smashing the nail on the board". Miao Peishi's "mine fire" said: "the hero talks like a nail on the board. Since you are willing to work for the brothers, it depends on what you say."
Chinese PinYin : bǎn shàng dìng dīng
that 's final
said of a loyal counsellor who gives admonition to the emperor in person. miàn zhé tíng zhēng
Draw the line and cut the ink. yǐn shéng qiē mò