Go through the fire
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is "R ù Hu ǒ f ù t ā ng", which means to refer to avoiding difficulties and dangers. It comes from four Travels: the origin of Laojun's Taoism.
Analysis of Idioms
Go through fire and water
The origin of Idioms
"Four travels · Laojun Taoism origin" says: "go to the soup in the fire, go down to the earth and go up to heaven, die in the ashes, willing to follow the immortal." It is also called "into fire". Shen Congwen's "border town" 3: "to help people stay away from adversity is to go into fire."
Idiom usage
As a predicate or attribute; used in figurative sentences.
Chinese PinYin : rù huǒ fù tāng
Go through the fire
Beat the bone and drain the marrow. chuí gǔ lì suǐ
different categories of rainfall intensity and wind scales. wǔ fēng shí yǔ
take the words too literally. wàng wén shēng xùn
turn traitor for personal gain. qū jié rǔ mìng
drain the pond to get all the fish. hé zé ér yú
leave one 's native place and live as a vagabond. lí xiāng bèi tǔ