Surrender
As a Chinese idiom, the Pinyin is Ji à NGX à NF à sh à u, which means to be humble and submissive. It comes from the general discussion of reform on the imperial examination.
The origin of Idioms
Liang Qichao's general discussion on the reform and on the imperial examination: "so today's scholars, though they have great ambitions, can't help but bow to their heart and devote themselves to the cause of poetry and Fu, but they are proficient in Confucianism and can't wait."
Idiom usage
As predicate, object, adverbial; used in dealing with affairs.
Chinese PinYin : jiàng xīn fǔ shǒu
Surrender
the corrupt became honest and the drifters filled with ambition. wán lián nuò lì
salute with folded hands and make deep bows. dǎ gǒng zuò yī
may your family grow and prosper like spreading melonvines. mián mián guā dié
rosy lips and pretty white teeth. chún hóng chǐ bái