Get out of the way
Li ǒ OSH ē NTU ō m ì ng, a Chinese idiom, means to get rid of the fetters of the world and be free. It's from Ren Zi Ji by Zheng Tingyu of Yuan Dynasty.
Idiom explanation
To get rid of the fetters of the world and be free.
Idioms and allusions
[source] the second part of Yuan Dynasty Zheng Tingyu's "Ren Zi Ji" says: "I feel that my teacher Dutuo promoted me. Now I'm not punished by Wang FA. I'm just like telling lies to me. I'll lose my life to him."
Discrimination of words
Phonetic code: LSTM usage: used as object and attribute; used in written language
Chinese PinYin : le shēn tuō mìng
Get out of the way
evil men usurping authority. chái láng héng dào
act from inside in coordination with forces attacking from outside. lǐ gōu wài lián
solicit help from potential backers high and low. zuàn tiān mì féng
Strong branches but weak roots. qiáng zhī ruò běn
end neither in victory nor defeat. bù fēn shèng fù
Judge kindness by righteousness. yǐ yì duàn ēn
a phrase with a double meaning. yī yǔ shuāng guān
as easily as turning one 's hand over. fǎn shǒu kě dé