Take care of one's life
Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Q ī ngsh ē nzh ò ngy ì, meaning despise life and attach importance to just cause. From baopuzi Mingben.
The origin of Idioms
The Ming edition of baopuzi written by Ge Hong of Jin Dynasty: "the art of attacking and defending interest, the festival of valuing one's life and righteousness."
Idiom usage
As predicate, attribute, object; used of people. Example: Volume 29 of guanghongmingji of shidaoxuan in Tang Dynasty: "Weiwu scriptures are light-weight and attach great importance to righteousness. The state is not to be expected, and the heaven is not to be expected."
Chinese PinYin : qīng shēn zhòng yì
Take care of one's life
Sweep away the hole and seize the channel. sǎo xué qín qú
profess one thing, but mean another. kǒu bù yìng xīn
each performs its own functions. chén lì jiù liè
talent unsurpassed in one 's generation. gài shì zhī cái