have a niche in the temple of fame
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Li ú f āǎ NGB ǎ ISH ì, which means that the good name will be handed down forever.
The origin of Idioms
In Liu Yiqing's a new account of the world, you regret, in the Southern Song Dynasty, Duke Huan said in his lying language, "this loneliness will make Wen Jing laugh." Then he bent up and sat down and said, "you can't live forever, nor can you live forever?"
Idiom usage
To have a good reputation. example the biography of empress concubine in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wei annals: "in addition to the sage, the empress concubine passed on to the world." In the biography of Huan Wen in the book of Jin: "neither can we live forever, nor can we recover our bad memory for thousands of years!" Chapter 9 of the romance of the Three Kingdoms by Luo Guanzhong of the Ming Dynasty: if the general helps the Han Dynasty, he is a loyal minister, and is well-known throughout history. If the general helps Dong Zhuo, he is an anti minister, which has been written in history for thousands of years. In the three categories of personnel in the volume of the qionglin school for children, it is said that "if you do good things, you will be immortal, and if you do evil things, you will be immortal." It's not hard for a person to be immortal.
Idiom story
In the Eastern Jin Dynasty, Ma Huanwen, the chief minister, was in charge of the government. He made a lot of contributions to the war. He was in a high position and ambitious. He once lay in bed and said, "you can't live in obscurity." The confidants did not dare to say anything. He sat up from the bed and said, "even if a man can't live forever, he should be infamous for thousands of years."
Chinese PinYin : liú fāng bǎi shì
have a niche in the temple of fame
display one 's talent in an aggressive manner. fēng máng bī rén
A good man is getting better at work. hóng jiàn yú gàn
live in straitened circumstances. chuò shū yǐn shuǐ
A prodigal son never changes his money. làng zǐ huí tóu jīn bù huàn