Go out into life and death
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is ch ū R ù sh ē ngs ǐ, which means that you are still going from life to death. From the story of seamounts.
The origin of Idioms
Han Luo, Tang Dynasty, wrote in the book of seamounts: "I often kiss the edge, risk the stone, go out into life and death, and share it with my son."
Analysis of Idioms
Synonym: from life to death, from death to life
Idiom usage
As predicate and attributive, the same as "going from life to death"
Chinese PinYin : chū rù shēng sǐ
Go out into life and death
plunge into the wilds and flee. luò huāng ér zǒu