sacrifice life
Broken body, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ě ng ǔ Su ì sh ē n, meaning the body smashed, sacrifice life. From biography of Huo Xiaoyu.
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Huo Xiaoyu written by Jiang Fang of Tang Dynasty, "I have volunteered all my life. Today I am accepted. I am broken to pieces, and I swear not to give up."
Idiom usage
It is used as predicate, attribute, adverbial and object. Chapter 97 of the chronicles of the states of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty: "fan Ju knows that the heart of the king of Qin has been fixed. He asks him to go in and say," I've been listening to you, and I've been working with you, but I'm not paid for you. Although he had a plan to pacify the Qin Dynasty, he did not dare to do his best to serve the king. " In volume 20 of the book "the first moment makes a surprise", LAN sun Dao said: "the wife of Xianggong is a new born parent. Although she is broken to pieces, there is nothing to repay." In the palace of eternal life, scolding thieves by Hong Sheng of Qing Dynasty: "I can't help but take this opportunity to scold that guy and get angry. I can't say it's broken. "
Chinese PinYin : fěn gǔ suì shēn
sacrifice life
take into consideration both needs of the state and the interests of the collectives. tǒng chóu jiān gù
All water and all mountains are poor. shuǐ jìn shān qióng
stimulating oneself , but controlling one 's presence of mind. dòng xīn rěn xìng
If you have something to change, if you have nothing to encourage. yǒu zé gǎi zhī,wú zé jiā miǎn