Remorse for the extreme
Gaoji regret, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is k à NGJ í zh à Hu à, which means that people in a high position should guard against arrogance, otherwise they will regret their failure. Later, it also describes that those who are proud will inevitably bring disaster. It comes from Qian in the book of changes.
Notes on Idioms
Kang: supreme; regret: disaster.
The origin of Idioms
Qian in the book of changes: "on the ninth day of the reign of heaven, the dragon has regrets."
Idiom usage
As an object: it means that prosperity will decline.
Examples
"Baopuzi neipian" says, "if you look down, you will not cry out, if you look up, you will not regret, if you don't know anything, you will be very wise."
In the book of Jin, biography of the king of Qi, it is said that "today, the Duke of Ming Dynasty forgets the remorse of high and high, but suddenly he is poor and high. He abandoned the safety of the five mountains and lived in danger of exhaustion. He was doubted by his power and power outside, and damaged the God by a hundred premier inside. "
words whose meaning is similar
Chinese PinYin : kàng jí zhī huǐ
Remorse for the extreme
carry forward the cause pioneered by one 's predecessors and forge ahead into the future. jì wǎng kāi lái
tough and strong as iron and steel. tóng jīn tiě gǔ