Fu sunyinzi
Fu sun Yinzi, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is f ú s ū NY ì NZ ǐ, which means that Fu Yin extends to descendants. It comes from the story of pipa, five niangs bury their father-in-law.
The origin of Idioms
Ben Gaoming of Yuan Dynasty wrote in the story of pipa, Wu Niang buries her father-in-law: "this grave is only dry if you want to get it. It's hard to know if you can be blessed with sun yam Tzu. Then you can get a third Duke, and you can't help yourself."
Idiom usage
Used as a predicate or attributive; used in writing
Chinese PinYin : fú sūn yìn zǐ
Fu sunyinzi
the people live in destitution. mín shēng diāo bì
treat lowly but talented one with due respect. zhé jié xià shì
tremble with fear on hearing of. wén fēng sàng dǎn