To break the heart
The Chinese idiom, Du à nd à uju é f à, means a tragic death. It comes from the Western Han Dynasty's Liu Xiang's "Warring States strategy: Chu strategy I".
Idiom usage
He died in a tragic way. He died in a lonely and loyal way. He broke his heart and broke his stomach.
The origin of Idioms
In the Western Han Dynasty, Liu Xiang's "Warring States strategy - Chu strategy 1", it is said that "there are those who break their heart and break their stomach, and when they die in peace, they will not see the world, and they do not know what they are going to do, so they worry about the country."
Idiom explanation
He: neck; Jue: broken. Turn around and open the abdomen. To describe a tragic death.
Chinese PinYin : duàn dòu jué fù
To break the heart
dress in the coarse hempen cloth black. pī má dài xiào
take up and adopt others ' thoughts instead of using one 's own. shí rén yá huì
expect the reality to correspond to the name. zhēng míng zé shí