End one's life
As a Chinese idiom, Li ǎ OSH ē nd á m ì ng in pinyin means to be open-minded about the fate of one's life. From Li Yaxian flower wine Qujiang pool.
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] settle down and get rid of vulgarity
The origin of Idioms
The third fold of Li Yaxian flower wine Qujiang pool written by Shi Junbao of Yuan Dynasty: "when people ask about the life of Ya Xian, what will Zheng Yuanhe do?"
Analysis of Idioms
The first and fourth chapters of Shi Naian's outlaws of the Marsh: "why don't you take advantage of this time to find a place to live and deal with some money, fight a big boat, gather a few sailors, and find a clean office in the river and sea to live all the year round?" Chapter 74 of outlaws of the Marsh: "although Yanqing is the end of the thirty-six stars, he is as clever as the thirty-five The 90th chapter of outlaws of the Marsh: "a few years ago, it was known that Lu Zhishen was a man who died."
Chinese PinYin : liǎo shēn dá mìng
End one's life
keep a tight rein on self and cut down on expense. jǐn shēn jié yòng
have neither learning nor skill. bù xué wú shí
seek a moment 's peace however one can. gǒu qiě tōu ān