Never heard of death
The Chinese idiom, Pinyin is m è is ǐ y ǐ w é n, which means risking death to report to you, indicating caution and fear. It comes from the Zhao family in historical records.
Idiom usage
It's a long-term peace in the world. It's a great reputation. I'd like to hear about death.
The origin of Idioms
Zhao family in historical records: "the old officials are cheap, and Shu Qi is the least. They are unworthy, but the officials are poor. They steal and love them. They are willing to make up for the lack of black clothes to defend the Royal Palace, and they have no knowledge of death."
Idiom explanation
I: take the risk. To make heard. I'll tell you at the risk of death. Show caution and fear.
Chinese PinYin : mèi sǐ yǐ wén
Never heard of death
fit in exactly with one's wishes. zhèng zhòng xià huái
assiduously practice calligraphy. lín chí xué shū
the man who rather trusted his measurements than placing any confidence in his own feet when buying shoes. zhèng rén mǎi lǚ
the time and fates are against someone. mìng jiǎn shí guāi