Breaking liver and stomach
Broken liver and stomach, is a Chinese idiom, pronunciation is p ò g ā nm í w è I, which means to describe the utmost loyalty. It comes from the book of Jin, Liu congzai Ji.
Analysis of Idioms
It's like a liver full of gall
The origin of Idioms
In the book of Jin, Liu congzai Ji: "but he frequently beheaded the prince by refusing to give a small duty, and imprisoned the general if he said he disobeyed the order. There is no limit to hunting, and there is no need to repair the machine. I have not solved the theft, so I forget to sleep and eat. "
Idiom usage
Used as attributive or adverbial; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : pò gān mí wèi
Breaking liver and stomach
be beautiful enough to feast the eyes. xiù sè kě cān
gifted scholars and beautiful ladies. jiā rén cái zǐ
Hold your head high and believe in your eyebrows. áng shǒu shēn méi
clarion call to awaken the public to lurking danger by writing at the top of one 's voice. dà shēng jí hū
ten thousand horses stand mute. wàn mǎ qí yīn