Gold and stone
Jinshi Zhigong, a Chinese idiom, is a Chinese phonetic alphabet of J ī NSH í zh ī g ō ng, which means an immortal achievement engraved on the stele of Zhongding. It's from Xin Yu Zhi de by Han Lujia.
The origin of Idioms
In Xin Yu Zhi De, written by Lu Jia of Han Dynasty, "the enmity of the neighboring countries lies outside, and the enmity of the subordinates lies inside. It is not difficult for us to build up the achievements of gold and stone and pass them on forever."
Idiom usage
[example] in the book with Yang dezu written by Cao Zhi of Wei Dynasty in the Three Kingdoms period, it is said that "we should work together to go up to the country, benefit the people, build an eternal cause and make contributions to the country."
Chinese PinYin : jīn shí zhī gōng
Gold and stone
benefit other people as well as oneself1 . benefit other people as well as oneself. jì rén lì wù
The opposite side of the story. fǎn miàn wén zhāng
It's too fast to cover your ears. xùn léi bù jí yǎn ěr
There is not enough success, but more failure. chéng shì bù zú,bài shì yǒu yú