You will be gone
The Chinese idiom, sh ì Ji ā ngq ù R ǔ, means farewell. From Shi · Wei Feng · Shuo mo.
The origin of Idioms
Shi · Wei Feng · Shuo Mo: you are passing away and you are in a happy land. Zheng xuanjian: gone, gone. I'm going to say goodbye to my daughter.
Idiom usage
Examples
Empress lingsihe in the second chapter of empress in the book of the later Han Dynasty: the rebellious minister's life will not be prolonged, and you will be quiet and mysterious when you are about to die.
Zhao Yi of the Qing Dynasty's "Oubei poetry · Du Shaoling poetry": another song "go to Yixing" says: "wild people are broad-minded and have no shy face, how can they stay among the princes and Marquis for a long time." It is clear that there is a sigh of "you will be gone".
Chinese PinYin : shì jiāng qù rǔ
You will be gone
Chanting the wind and the moon. yǒng cháo fēng yuè
Under the heavy reward, there must be brave men. zhòng shǎng zhī xià,bì yǒu yǒng fū
recuperate and build up strength. xiū yǎng shēng xī
the music lingered in the air long after the performance ended. yú yīn niǎo niǎo