leave a name behind one
It is a famous Chinese idiom.
Pinyin; m í ngchu í h ò ush ì
Interpretation: a good reputation spreads to future generations.
It comes from the biography of Zang Hongzhuan in the history of the Three Kingdoms: "the image of the body will be passed down to later generations."
source
In historical records, the family of Goujian, king of Yue, it is said that "Fan Li's three migrations all had a glorious name, and his name will be passed down to later generations." According to the biography of Zang Hong in the annals of the Three Kingdoms, Wei Shu, it is said that the image of the body will be passed down to later generations In the book of Han Dynasty, Volume 4, 15, biography of Xifu bow: "in the past, Duke Miao of Qin Dynasty did not follow the words of bailixi and uncle Jian to defeat his teacher and repent of his mistakes. He was famous for his mistakes and thought of Huang's words." The 110th chapter of the chronicles of the Eastern Zhou Dynasty by Feng Menglong of the Ming Dynasty: "although he didn't die, his eldest husband killed himself to be benevolent and regarded death as a return. His contribution was at that time, and he was well-known in the future. Why don't he wish it?"
synonym
stamp one 's name on the page of history
Chinese PinYin : míng chuí hòu shì
leave a name behind one
be soaked in a dark liquid without becoming back. niè ér bù zī
I don't know how to love you. bù zhī téng yǎng
so beautiful as to overrun cities and ruin states. qīng chéng qīng guó