Broken to pieces
Broken bones and bodies, a Chinese idiom, Pinyin is Su ì g ǔ f ě NSH ī, which means to smash and destroy things completely. From the third issue of the Journal of poetry, 1978.
The origin of Idioms
The third issue of the Journal of poetry, 1978: "eighty years ago, decadent China welcomed you with a thick black curtain. How could you know that it was such a giant who would smash the old world to pieces with an iron fist."
Idiom usage
Used as an attributive or adverbial
Analysis of Idioms
To break one's body to pieces
Chinese PinYin : suì gǔ fěn shī
Broken to pieces
It's better to accumulate money than to use skilful skills. jī cái qiān wàn,bù rú bó j
pledge ourselves to live and die together. shì tóng shēng sǐ