a person of heavy responsibility
Taishan liangmu, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is t à ISH à NLI á NGM à, which means like the collapse of Taishan and the destruction of liangmu; it refers to the death of a great man. It's from the book of rites on the Tangong.
The origin of Idioms
In the book of rites, on the sandalwood bow: "Confucius made it by fleas, swayed his staff with his hand, and swayed it at the door. The Song said:" Mount Tai is decadent! It's bad to dye wood! A wise man is withered! "
Idiom usage
It refers to the death of a great man.
Examples
When the country's foundation is not solid, and the talent shortage is coming, who will support the crisis? Taishan liangmu, the same people are not self defeating. The 22nd chapter of the popular romance of the Republic of China
Idiom story
Confucius worked all his life for his benevolent government and fraternity. He was about to die. One day, after he got up, he walked slowly in front of the door with his crutch on his back and said, "Mount Tai is going to fall, the roof beam is going to break, and the sage is going to die." After singing, he went back to the room and sat at the door.
Zi Gong, a student of Confucius, heard the sage's sigh and thought to himself, "Mount Tai is going to fall. Who do I look up to? The beams of the house are broken, and the sage is dead. Who will I take as an example in the future? Is master's life coming to an end?"
Sure enough, Confucius died after seven consecutive days of illness.
Chinese PinYin : tài shān liáng mù
a person of heavy responsibility
discard the classics and rebel against orthodoxy. lí jīng pàn dào
so great is one 's achievements as to make one 's boss feel uneasy or insecure. gōng gāo zhèn zhǔ
guessed what was happening but did not know what was really taking place. zhuō mō bù dìng
never associate with bad companions. mén wú zá kè