there is no escape from fate
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin, is Ji é sh ù n á NT á o, which means that in Buddhist terms, the disaster is doomed; the disaster is doomed. From the romance of Fengshen.
The origin of Idioms
Chapter 50 of the romance of the gods by Xu Zhonglin of Ming Dynasty: "it's just so-called that it's hard to reach the immortals. If you cut off the top three flowers, even if you Buddha comes, you will lose your breath. It's hard to escape when you meet him. How can you hide when you meet him? "
Idiom usage
Used as an object or attribute; used in superstition. Chapter three of Gu Hua's Furong Town: "this time I can't help myself, and I can't escape." When Zongmin heard the words, he and Zicheng prayed together, three divination and three auspicious. The gods also help the thieves. I think it's ~. The ninety sixth chapter of the romance of Ming history by Cai Dongfan
Chinese PinYin : jié shù nán táo
there is no escape from fate