a man lives with his work
The Chinese idiom, R é NC ú nzh è NGJ ǔ, used to mean that a person in charge of political power can carry out his political ideas when he is alive. From the book of rites, the doctrine of the mean by Dai Sheng in the Western Han Dynasty.
Idiom usage
Only these arguments are words that seriously take responsibility for the affairs of the world, so it is easy for people to survive in politics. Wei xiuren's the trace of the moon in Qing Dynasty chapter 46
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, the doctrine of the mean, written by Dai Sheng in the Western Han Dynasty, it is said that "if a person survives, his political work will be carried out; if he dies, his political interest will be given."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: the death of man and the end of government
Chinese PinYin : rén cún zhèng jǔ
a man lives with his work
swallow insult and humiliation silently. píng qì tūn shēng
Qianbuba village, hoububa shop. qián bù bā cūn,hòu bù bā diàn