ready to die the cruelest death for principles
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā nd ǎ NT ú D ì, which means to describe a tragic death. He is loyal and willing to sacrifice anything. From Shuoyuan shanshuo by Liu Xiang of Han Dynasty.
The origin of Idioms
In Shuoyuan shanshuo written by Liu Xiang of Han Dynasty, "if the carnivore fails to plan in the temple, he would rather live in the wild of central plains without guts?"
Idiom usage
"Han Shi waizhuan" Volume 7: Chen Xian Dian jueying also, at that time, it was appropriate to be brave enough to bear the burden for a long time.
Chinese PinYin : gān dǎn tú dì
ready to die the cruelest death for principles
her beauty is good enough for the aristocracy. yōng róng huá guì
a person of supreme sincerity and nobility. zhì chéng gāo jié
release a tiger to protect oneself -- to bring trouble on oneself while attempting to avoid it with other means. fàng hǔ zì wèi