One's resolve is unshaken.
As a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is sh ǐ zh ì B ù y í, which means to swear to be determined and never change. From Strange Tales of Liaozhai, aunt Qiu.
The origin of Idioms
Pu Songling of the Qing Dynasty wrote in Liao Zhai Zhi Yi Qiu Da Niang that "Zhong Shu was honest in his marriage, and encouraged him to drive many times, but Shao was determined not to waver."
Analysis of Idioms
Antonym: three at night, different thoughts change; synonym: unswervingly, the sea is dry and the stone is rotten
Idiom usage
The verb object type is used as predicate and adverbial with commendatory meaning. Feng Xuefeng's on & lt; defending Yan'an & gt;: he is determined to serve the people with such spiritual quality
Chinese PinYin : shǐ zhì bù yí
One's resolve is unshaken.
correct evil doings and revert to good deeds. gǎi xíng qiān shàn
The dike of a thousand miles is destroyed by the ant nest. qiān lǐ zhī dī,huǐ yú yǐ xué