remember as long as one lives
Never forget, Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m ò ch ǐ n á NW à ng, meaning never forget. It comes from the form of congratulation and amnesty for Runan state.
Idiom explanation
No teeth: for life.
The origin of Idioms
Li Shangyin of Tang Dynasty wrote in the form of congratulation and amnesty for Runan gonghuazhou: "Sima talked about the ceremony of accompanying the palace, which is unforgettable."
Analysis of Idioms
[synonym] unforgettable and unforgettable [antonym] ungrateful
Idiom usage
It's formal, predicate and commendatory. Example: when to break up the battlements suddenly, when to form the grass to report the ring, to feel the next day. In the Ming Dynasty, Yang rousheng's Yuhuan Ji fan Zhang biegao and the Analects of Confucius Xianwen said, "people also won the three hundred yuan of Bo's parallel Town, spared food, no teeth, no complaints." In the book of historical records, Liang Xiaowang's family: "it's the late Chengwang who dare not make jokes without teeth. He will do what he says."
Chinese PinYin : mò chǐ nán wàng
remember as long as one lives
the things are still there , but men are no more the same ones. wù shì rén fēi
Three rivers and seven rivers. sān jiāng qī zé
his eyes are bigger than his belly. yǎn chán dù bǎo