at stake
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is C ú NW á NGX ù Ju é, which means to restore the perished country, continue to sever the aristocratic family. It comes from ancient history II.
Notes on Idioms
Keep: keep; continue: continue.
The origin of Idioms
Gong Zizhen of the Qing Dynasty wrote in ancient history gouchen Lun 2: "born Confucius did not follow the Zhou Dynasty, did not precede the Zhou Dynasty, survived and perished, so as to serve as a pivot."
Idiom usage
The situation is extremely critical. Example: in the Analects of Confucius, Yao Yue said, "the rise and fall of the state, the continuation of the peerless, the rest of the people, the people of the world return." In the 17th year of Duke Yu in Gongyang biography, it is said that "Duke Huan has the merit of inheriting and dying, so it is taboo for a gentleman." He wanted to know the way of the king, to distinguish between human affairs, to distinguish right from wrong, good from evil, to survive or perish, to make up for or abolish, and to serve as a guide for future emperors and ministers. (Zhu Ziqing's the ninth book of the Han Dynasty in historical records)
Chinese PinYin : cún wáng xù jué
at stake
full of energy ; with high spirit. jīng shén bǎi bèi
houses have adequate supplies and people live in contentment. jiā yīn rén zú
many generals and ample soldiers. bīng duō jiàng guǎng
feel like old friends at the first meeting. yī jiàn rú jiù
put the cart before the horse. chē zài mǎ qián
in guangdong dogs bark at the snow. yuè quǎn fèi xuě
The sun rises and the moon changes. rì líng yuè tì