to forget about one 's own
Desperate is a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is: F è Nb ú g ù sh ē n, refers to courageous forward, regardless of personal safety, from "Bao Ren Shaoqing book".
Analysis of Idioms
Phonetic code: FBGs Grammar: formal; predicate, attributive, adverbial; commendatory synonym: sacrifice one's life and forget one's death antonym: fear one's life and fear one's death allegorical sayings: fighting in the pit lantern riddle: fighting in the pit
Idiom usage
Although the subordinates dare not say that they have been trained for a long time and have the courage to know the way, they have the great righteousness. Chapter 115 of the popular romance of the Republic of China by Cai Dongfan and Xu Xianfu.
The origin of Idioms
[source] in Han Dynasty, Sima Qian's book of reporting to Ren Shaoqing: "Chang Si is desperate to die for the country."
Chinese PinYin : fèn bù gù shēn
to forget about one 's own
wail like ghosts and howl like wolves. guǐ kū láng háo
become destitute and homeless. liú luò shī suǒ
A hundred feet are not stiff. bǎi zú bù jiāng
find amusement when the occasion arises. féng chǎng zuò xì