Donate to the country
Sacrifice one's body to serve one's country, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Ju ā NQ ū B à Ogu ó, meaning to give up one's body and serve one's country. It comes from the biography of Wang Ji in the history of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute and object
Examples
I want to be a military general and contribute to my country. The 16th chapter of the complete biography of Shuoyue by Qian Cai in Qing Dynasty
Analysis of Idioms
Synonyms: be loyal to the country, die for the country, be loyal to the country
Antonym: betraying the country for glory
The origin of Idioms
In the biography of Wang Ji in the history of the Yuan Dynasty, it is said that "the minister accepted the favor with his cloth and vowed to donate his body to serve the country. Now that he is in the army, he is lucky to die!"
Chinese PinYin : juān qū bào guó
Donate to the country
do what little one can to help. tiān zhuān jiē wǎ
making fun of and cursing angrily -- to write freely. xī xiào nù mà
the wind and rain come in their time. fēng tiáo yǔ shùn