Extraordinary
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is ch ā OSH ì Ju é s ú, which means to surpass the contemporary and surpass the secular. It comes from Xuanhe Shupu, a poem for the ancestors.
The origin of Idioms
Zhao Ji of the Song Dynasty wrote in Xuan he Shu Pu, a poem for our ancestors: "the combination of Qi Chengxing and zhuansa naturally has a state of transcendence."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, attribute; used of people or things. I think that at that time there must have been a theory of transcendence. I'm sorry that it didn't pass on. Nan Xuan he he by Liu Xun in Yuan Dynasty
Chinese PinYin : chāo shì jué sú
Extraordinary
hovering between life and death. yī fó chū shì,èr fó shēng tiān
My head is burning and my forehead is rotten. tóu jiāo é làn
there is a crack to squeeze through. yǒu bīn kě chéng
If you are not high, you are not low. gāo bù chéng,dī bù jiù