be high without danger
High but not dangerous, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is g ā o é RB ù w ē I, which means to be in a high position without danger of overturning. From the book of filial piety, chapter of princes.
The origin of Idioms
"The book of filial piety, chapter of the princes:" high but not dangerous, so often shougui also; full but not overflow, so long Shoufu also
Idiom usage
In the biography of Gao Cong's teachings in the history of the new Five Dynasties, it is said that "we should not be arrogant, lofty but not dangerous, and we should be strict but not overflow." 2. See the rolling waves, hit the current in the waves; sand gulls sing in the air, Jin scales into the water. The sea and the sky are the same color, the wind is boundless; the smoke is flying in the sky, the moon is bright. The Dragon King strikes the bell and tells of the vicissitudes of life. Looking back at the Great Wall, the Dragon leaps and the tiger leaps; looking far into the sky, the waves come from the moon. 3. Full but not overflowing, high but not dangerous, deep into the sea of Buddhism, love with courtesy. 4. Not arrogant, high but not dangerous, moderate and sincere, full but not overflowing. 5. Not arrogant, high but not dangerous, so long keep expensive also, system section sincerely degree, full but not overflow, so long keep rich also.
Chinese PinYin : gāo ér bù wēi
be high without danger
hold on to one 's wrong belief till death. zhì sǐ bù wù
See the beginning and know the end. jiàn shǐ zhī zhōng